Abstract

BackgroundPlant biomass is an abundant but underused feedstock for bioenergy production due to its complex and variable composition, which resists breakdown into fermentable sugars. These feedstocks, however, are routinely degraded by many uncommercialized microbes such as anaerobic gut fungi. These gut fungi express a broad range of carbohydrate active enzymes and are native to the digestive tracts of ruminants and hindgut fermenters. In this study, we examine gut fungal performance on these substrates as a function of composition, and the ability of this isolate to degrade inhibitory high syringyl lignin-containing forestry residues.ResultsWe isolated a novel fungal specimen from a donkey in Independence, Indiana, United States. Phylogenetic analysis of the Internal Transcribed Spacer 1 sequence classified the isolate as a member of the genus Piromyces within the phylum Neocallimastigomycota (Piromyces sp. UH3-1, strain UH3-1). The isolate penetrates the substrate with an extensive rhizomycelial network and secretes many cellulose-binding enzymes, which are active on various components of lignocellulose. These activities enable the fungus to hydrolyze at least 58% of the glucan and 28% of the available xylan in untreated corn stover within 168 h and support growth on crude agricultural residues, food waste, and energy crops. Importantly, UH3-1 hydrolyzes high syringyl lignin-containing poplar that is inhibitory to many fungi with efficiencies equal to that of low syringyl lignin-containing poplar with no reduction in fungal growth. This behavior is correlated with slight remodeling of the fungal secretome whose composition adapts with substrate to express an enzyme cocktail optimized to degrade the available biomass.ConclusionsPiromyces sp. UH3-1, a newly isolated anaerobic gut fungus, grows on diverse untreated substrates through production of a broad range of carbohydrate active enzymes that are robust to variations in substrate composition. Additionally, UH3-1 and potentially other anaerobic fungi are resistant to inhibitory lignin composition possibly due to changes in enzyme secretion with substrate. Thus, anaerobic fungi are an attractive platform for the production of enzymes that efficiently use mixed feedstocks of variable composition for second generation biofuels. More importantly, our work suggests that the study of anaerobic fungi may reveal naturally evolved strategies to circumvent common hydrolytic inhibitors that hinder biomass usage.

Highlights

  • Plant biomass is an abundant but underused feedstock for bioenergy production due to its complex and variable composition, which resists breakdown into fermentable sugars

  • We aligned these amplicons against 51 Genbank-deposited anaerobic fungal sequences and confirmed that our isolate formed a distinct branch within the fungal Piromyces genus (Fig. 2) [24, 34]

  • While hydrolytic rates were not measured as the secretome of UH3-1 is a crude preparation of lignocellulolytic enzymes and other unrelated proteins that increase over time, similar studies of anaerobic fungi suggest that our observed glucan conversion is not limiting and would improve with increased enzyme loading and/or time [64]

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Summary

Introduction

Plant biomass is an abundant but underused feedstock for bioenergy production due to its complex and variable composition, which resists breakdown into fermentable sugars These feedstocks, are routinely degraded by many uncommercialized microbes such as anaerobic gut fungi. Current lignocellulolytic enzymes systems are based on well-known fungi such as Trichoderma reesei and Aspergillus spp. due to their oversecretion of many glycoside hydrolyases (CAZymes), which are active on the glycosidic bonds of lignocellulosic materials [8]. These species do not naturally express all the enzymes needed to fully hydrolyze the sugars contained in plant biomass [9]. A single species enzyme platform would simplify enzyme production and reduce cost

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