Abstract

BackgroundLignocellulosic biomass is a complex network of polymers making the cell walls of plants. It represents a feedstock of sustainable resources to be converted into fuels, chemicals and materials. Because of its complex architecture, lignocellulose is a recalcitrant material that necessitates some pretreatments and several types of catalysts to be transformed efficiently. In particular, enzymes degrading lignocellulose can become inactivated due to their binding to lignin through non-specific interactions, leading to a loss in catalytic efficiency of industrial processes. Gaining more knowledge in the strength of interactions would allow optimizing enzymes and selecting appropriate pretreatments.ResultsMeasuring interactions directly in plant cell wall can theoretically be performed using confocal fluorescence techniques by evaluating fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between compatible fluorophores. In this study, autofluorescence of plant cell wall, mainly originating from lignin, was considered as a donor fluorophore while the acceptor was a common rhodamine-based fluorescent probe. To overcome complex plant cell wall fluorescence, which limits FRET analysis by standard techniques, we have developed an original approach, combining spectral and lifetime measurements. It consists in (1) dissecting autofluorescence signal in each spectral channel, (2) optimizing spectral channel choice for lifetime measurements and (3) achieving an unambiguous FRET signature with an autofluorescent donor fluorophore. Interactions between rhodamine-based probes of various sizes and untreated or pretreated wheat sample were evaluated, showing it was possible to discriminate interactions at the nano-scale, revealing some accessibility differences and the effect of pretreatment.ConclusionsSLiM measurement allows precise estimation of the optimal spectral range for FRET measurement. SLiM response allows for the first time doubtless FRET measurements between lignin as a donor, and an acceptor fluorophore with high accuracy and sensitivity related to lifetime decrease studies. As demonstrated, it thus becomes possible to measure interactions of fluorescent probes directly inside plant cell wall samples. This approach can thus be applied to various fields such as lignocellulose deconstruction to optimize the action of enzymes or plant cell wall development to assay in situ the biosynthesis of lignin.

Highlights

  • Lignocellulosic biomass is a complex network of polymers making the cell walls of plants

  • While fluorescence lifetime measurement is the method of choice to quantify fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) events, it can lead to biased interpretation when applied to complex samples, especially when autofluorescence cannot be neglected

  • We previously demonstrated that correlating fluorescence lifetime and fluorescence spectrum measurements, one can achieve FRET quantification in such samples [34, 35]

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Summary

Introduction

Lignocellulosic biomass is a complex network of polymers making the cell walls of plants. It represents a feedstock of sustainable resources to be converted into fuels, chemicals and materials. Enzymes degrading lignocellulose can become inactivated due to their binding to lignin through non-specific interactions, leading to a loss in catalytic efficiency of industrial processes. Lignocellulose is a very complex network of polysaccharides (mainly cellulose and hemicelluloses) and polyphenols (lignin) which are difficult to extract and to transform optimally [2]. That is why some physico-chemical pretreatments [3, 4] are often applied to open the polymer network in order to favour the accessibility and the action of green and specific catalysts such as enzymes [5, 6]. Being not available for catalysis events, enzymes become inactive, so that the cost of enzymes in hydrolysis process can be a limiting factor

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