Abstract
The generation of a fermentable hydrolysate from arabinoxylan is an important prerequisite for utilization of wheat hemicellulose in production of ethanol or other value added products. This study examined the individual and combined efficiencies of four selected, commercial, multicomponent enzyme preparations Celluclast 1.5 L (from Trichoderma reesei), Finizym (from Aspergillus niger), Ultraflo L (from Humicola insolens), and Viscozyme L (from Aspergillus aculeatus) in catalyzing arabinose and xylose release from water-soluble wheat arabinoxylan in an industrial fermentation residue (still bottoms) in lab scale experiments. Different reaction conditions, i.e. enzyme dosage, reaction time, pH, and temperature, were evaluated in response surface and ternary mixture designs. Ultraflo L treatment gave optimal arabinose release: treatment (6 h, 60 °C, pH 6) with this enzyme preparation liberated up to 46% by weight (wt.%) of the theoretically maximal arabinose yield from the substrate. Celluclast 1.5 L was superior to the other enzyme preparations in releasing xylose and catalyzed release of up to 25 wt.% of the theoretical maximum xylose yield (6 h, 60 °C, pH 4). Prolonged treatment for 24 h with a 50:50 mixture of Celluclast 1.5 L and Ultraflo L at 50 °C, pH 5 exhibited a synergistic effect in xylose release and 62 wt.% of the theoretically maximal xylose yield was achieved. Addition of pure β-xylosidase from T. reesei to the Ultraflo L preparation released the same amounts of xylose from the substrate as the 50:50 mixture of Celluclast 1.5 L and Ultraflo L. The data thus signified that the synergistic effect in xylose release between Celluclast 1.5 L and Ultraflo L is the result of a three-step interaction mechanism involving α- l-arabinofuranosidase and different xylan degrading enzyme activities in the two enzyme preparations.
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