Abstract

Methanol formation during the degradation of synthetic lignin (DHP), spruce and birch milled wood lignin (MWL) by Phanerochaete chrysosporium Burds. was studied under different culture conditions. When 100-ml flasks with 15–20 ml volumes of culture media containing high glucose and low nitrogen concentrations were used the metabolism of methanol to formaldehyde, formic acid and CO2 was repressed thereby facilitating methanol determination. In standing cultures with oxygen flushing the fungus converted up to 25% of the DHP-methoxyl groups to methanol and 0.5–1.5% to 14CO2 within 22–24 h. Methanol formation from methoxyl-labelled DHP was strongly repressed by high nitrogen in the medium, by addition of glutamic acid and by culture agitation. These results indicate that methanol is formed only under ligninolytic conditions and during secondary metabolism. Methanol is most likely released both from the lignin polymer itself and from lignin degradation products. Methanol was also formed from MWL preparations with higher percentage yields produced from birch as compared to spruce MWL.

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