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Lignocellulose pretreatment in a fungus-cultivating termite

Published in:

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 114(18) , 4709-4714 (May 02 2017)

Author(s):

Li, H., Yelle, D. J., Li, C., Yang, M., Ke, J., Zhang, R., Liu, Y., Zhu, N., Liang, S., Mo, X., Ralph, J., Currie, C. R., Mo, J.

DOI:

10.1073/pnas.1618360114

Abstract:

Depolymerizing lignin, the complex phenolic polymer fortifying plant cell walls, is an essential but challenging starting point for the lignocellulosics industries. The variety of ether- and carbon-carbon interunit linkages produced via radical coupling during lignification limit chemical and biological depolymerization efficiency. In an ancient fungus-cultivating termite system, we reveal unprecedentedly rapid lignin depolymerization and degradation by combining laboratory feeding experiments, lignocellulosic compositional measurements, electron microscopy, 2D-NMR, and thermochemolysis. In a gut transit time of under 3.5 h, in young worker termites, poplar lignin sidechains are extensively cleaved and the polymer is significantly depleted, leaving a residue almost completely devoid of various condensed units that are traditionally recognized to be the most recalcitrant. Subsequently, the fungus-comb microbiome preferentially uses xylose and cleaves polysaccharides, thus facilitating final utilization of easily digestible oligosaccharides by old worker termites. This complementary symbiotic pretreatment process in the fungus-growing termite symbiosis reveals a previously unappreciated natural system for efficient lignocellulose degradation.

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