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1.
Wood-feeding termites (WFT) have proven to be highly efficient for wood digestion. There is evidence to support the hypothesis that there are ligninolytic enzymes existing in the gut of WFT responsible for wood pretreatment toward cellulose utilization. Elucidating the mechanism of biomass pretreatment through lignin modification in termites will help to develop more efficient lignocellulosic biofuel production processes. The in-vivo degradation of aromatic compounds with different substructures, including dyes, lignin model monomers and dimers, and lignin sulfonate, by Coptotermes formosanus (Shiraki) was investigated. The degradation of aromatic compounds was determined using pyrolysis-gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. The results revealed that WFT were able to metabolize the conjugated aromatic structures and that the degradation efficiency is higher in the foregut and midgut regions than in the hindgut. This is the first time that evidence has been provided to show different aromatic compound degradation in the separate gut segments of a termite. This study provides information on the C. formosanus (Shiraki) lignin modification phenomenon, and it demonstrates that phenomenon’s potential in the breakdown of the plant cell wall. Understanding this lignin modification could contribute to technology that will supplant current harsh pretreatment protocols for plant cell walls and thereby better facilitate the conversion of cellulose and hemicellulose.  相似文献   

2.
高效降解木质纤维素的白蚁肠道微生物组   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
李丹红  王誉  杨红 《微生物学报》2017,57(6):876-884
木食性白蚁是自然界木质纤维素的高效降解者,在长期进化过程中白蚁与其肠道微生物组协同作用发展出不同的纤维素降解机制。木食性白蚁具有分别来源于白蚁和共生微生物的两套纤维素酶系统。在低等白蚁中,木质颗粒经过白蚁前、中肠分泌的内源性酶初步消化后,在后肠共生鞭毛虫中被降解为乙酸、二氧化碳和氢。高等木食性白蚁在进化中丢失了鞭毛虫,木质颗粒经白蚁自身分泌的酶初步消化后,在后肠大量共生细菌的帮助下被有效降解。培菌类白蚁利用其菌圃中的蚁巢伞菌和肠道微生物协同作用降解木质纤维素。共生微生物在白蚁的氮素固定与循环、中间产物代谢及纤维素降解等过程中发挥了重要作用。学习和模拟白蚁高效降解木质纤维素的体系,对生物质能源的产业化发展具有积极的意义。  相似文献   

3.
Abstract: In several aspects termites are a fascinating group of insects having attracted the interest of many researchers. They exhibit a complex social behavior and caste differentiation occurring elsewhere only among the hymenoptera. In an enlarged part of the hindgut, the paunch, termites have established a unique symbiotic association with prokaryotic and eukaryotic microorganisms. A similar flora is also found in wood-eating roaches of the genus Cryptocercus . The study of symbiosis between termites and their intestinal microbes is of general interest, because due to this symbiotic interaction termites can feed on complex biopolymers such as wood. Flagellates and bacteria occur in the gut of lower termites, while higher termites possess only bacteria. In particular spirochetes are abundant in the termite gut. Apart from spirochetes and other more common bacteria, actinomycetes, yeasts and fungi have also been isolated from different species of termites. This review summarizes the distinct role of the intestinal flora in degradation of wood components such as cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin.  相似文献   

4.
Hidden cellulases in termites: revision of an old hypothesis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The intestinal flagellates of termites produce cellulases that contribute to cellulose digestion of their host termites. However, 75% of all termite species do not harbour the cellulolytic flagellates; the endogenous cellulase secreted from the midgut tissue has been considered a sole source of cellulases in these termites. Using the xylophagous flagellate-free termites Nasutitermes takasagoensis and Nasutitermes walkeri, we successfully solubilized cellulases present in the hindgut pellets. Zymograms showed that the hindguts of these termites possessed several cellulases and contained up to 59% cellulase activity against crystalline cellulose when compared with the midgut. Antibiotic treatment administered to N. takasagoensis significantly reduced cellulase activity in the hindgut, suggesting that these cellulases were produced by symbiotic bacteria.  相似文献   

5.
Unlike lower termites, xylophagous higher termites thrive on wood without the aid of symbiotic protists. In the higher termite Nasutitermes takasagoensis, both endogenous endo-β-1,4-glucanase and β-glucosidase genes are expressed in the midgut, which is believed to be the main site of cellulose digestion. To further explore the detailed cellulolytic system in the midgut of N. takasagoensis, we performed immunohistochemistry and digital light microscopy to determine distributions of cellulolytic enzymes in the salivary glands and the midgut as well as the total cellulolytic activity in the midgut. Although cellulolytic enzymes were uniformly produced in the midgut epithelium, the concentration of endo-β-1,4-glucanase activity and luminal volume in the midgut were comparable to those of the wood-feeding lower termite Coptotermes formosanus, which digests cellulose with the aid of hindgut protists. However, the size of ingested wood particles was considerably larger in N. takasagoensis than that in C. formosanus. Nevertheless, it is possible that the cellulolytic system in the midgut of N. takasagoensis hydrolyzes highly crystalline cellulose to a certain extent. The glucose produced did not accumulate in the midgut lumen. Therefore, the present study suggests that the midgut of the higher termite provides the necessary conditions for cellulolysis.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract.  Throughout the history of studies on cellulose digestion in termites, carboxymethyl-cellulose has been preferably used as a substrate for measuring cellulase activity in termites due to its high solubility. However, carboxymethyl-cellulose degradation is not directly related to digestibility of naturally occurring cellulose because many noncellulolytic organisms can also hydrolyse carboxymethyl-cellulose. To address this issue, a comparative study of microcrystalline cellulose digestion is performed in diverse xylophagous termites, using gut homogenates. For those termites harbouring gut flagellates , the majority of crystalline cellulose appears to be digested in the hindgut, both in the supernatant and the pellet. For Nasutitermes takasagoensis , a termite free of gut flagellates, crystalline cellulose is degraded primarily in the midgut supernatant, and partially in the pellet of the hindgut. The fungus-growing termite Odontotermes formosanus , which also does not possess intestinal flagellates, shows only a trace of crystalline cellulose hydrolysis throughout the gut. Comparison of levels of activity against crystalline cellulose with previously reported levels of activity against carboxymethyl-cellulose in the gut of each termite reveals significant differences between these activities. The results suggest that the hindgut flagellates produce commonly cellobiohydrolases in addition to endo-β-1,4-glucanases, which presumably act synergistically to digest cellulose. Preliminary evidence for the involvement of bacteria in the cellulose digestion of N. takasagoensis is also found.  相似文献   

7.
Artificial diet was developed for rearing of lower termites (workers) Coptotermes formosanus. C. formosanus was fed with either wood powder of Japanese red pine, cellulose, cellobiose, or glucose for 30 days. The effect of carbon sources in the diet on the structure and function of the symbiotic intestinal microbial community and on the physiological activity of C. formosanus was studied. Three symbiont protozoa, Pseudotrichonympha grassi, Holomastigotoides hartmanni, and Spirotrichonympha leidyi, were found in the hindgut of C. formosanus that fed on the diets containing carbon sources with high molecular weight (MW). However, when artificial diets containing carbohydrate with low MW were used, both P. grassi and H. hartmanni disappeared, and only few S. leidyi were alive. This suggested that both P. grassi and H. hartmanni play important roles in the digestion and utilization of carbohydrate with high MW. The denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis analysis of bacterial community in the hindgut of termites showed that the similarity between intestinal bacteria community in termites fed with diets containing high-MW carbon sources and those with low MW was only about 40%. It was apparent that changes in diets resulted to changes in intestinal microbial community, and this in turn affected cellulase activity in C. formosanus.An erratum to this article can be found at  相似文献   

8.
Joseleau JP  Imai T  Kuroda K  Ruel K 《Planta》2004,219(2):338-345
The occurrence of lignin in the additional gelatinous (G-) layer that differentiates in the secondary wall of hardwoods during tension wood formation has long been debated. In the present work, the ultrastructural distribution of lignin in the cell walls of normal and tension wood fibres from poplar (Populus deltoides Bartr. ex Marshall) was investigated by transmission electron microscopy using cryo-fixation–freeze-substitution in association with immunogold probes directed against typical structural motifs of lignin. The specificity of the immunological probes for condensed and non-condensed guaiacyl and syringyl interunit linkages of lignin, and their high sensitivity, allowed detection of lignin epitopes of definite chemical structures in the G-layer of tension wood fibres. Semi-quantitative distribution of the corresponding epitopes revealed the abundance of syringyl units in the G-layer. Predominating non-condensed lignin sub-structures appeared to be embedded in the crystalline cellulose matrix prevailing in the G-layer. The endwise mode of polymerization that is known to lead to these types of lignin structures appears consistent with such an organized cellulose environment. Immunochemical labelling provides the first visualization in planta of lignin structures within the G-layer of tension wood. The patterns of distribution of syringyl epitopes indicate that syringyl lignin is deposited more intensely in the later phase of fibre secondary wall assembly. The data also illustrate that syringyl lignin synthesis in tension wood fibres is under specific spatial and temporal regulation targeted differentially throughout cell wall layers.Abbreviations G-layer Gelatinous layer - G Guaiacyl monomeric unit - PATAg Periodic acid–thiocarbohydrazide–silver proteinate - S Syringyl monomeric unit  相似文献   

9.
The ability of subterranean termites to digest lignocellulose relies not only on their digestive tract physiology, but also on the symbiotic relationships established with flagellate protists and bacteria. The objective of this work was to test the possible effect of different cellulose‐based diets on the community structure (species richness and other diversity metrics) of the flagellate protists of the subterranean termite Reticulitermes grassei. Termites belonging to the same colony were subjected to six different diets (natural diet, maritime pine wood, European beech, thermally modified European beech, cellulose powder and starvation), and their flagellate protist community was evaluated after the trials. All non‐treated sound woods produced similar flagellate protist communities that were more diverse and of high evenness (low dominance). On the contrary, flagellate protist communities from cellulose‐fed termites and starving termites were considered to be significantly different from all non‐treated woods; they were less diverse and some morphotypes became dominant as a consequence of flagellate protist communities having suffered major adaptations to these diets. The flagellate protist communities of untreated beech and thermally modified beech‐fed termites were considered to be significantly different in terms of abundance and morphotype diversity. This may be caused by a decrease in lignocellulose quality available for termites and from an interference of thermally treated wood with the chemical stability of the termite hindgut. Our study suggests that as a consequence of the strong division of labour among these protists to accomplish the intricate process of lignocellulose digestion, termite symbiotic flagellate protist communities are a dynamic assemblage able to adapt to different conditions and diets. This study is important for the community‐level alteration approach, and it is the first study to investigate the effects of thermally modified wood on the flagellate protist communities of subterranean termites.  相似文献   

10.
In our study, early period degradation (10 days) of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) sapwood by the brown-rot fungus Coniophora puteana (Schum.: Fr.) Karst. (BAM Ebw.15) was followed at the wood chemical composition and ultrastructurelevel, and highlighted the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). An advanced decay period of 50 days was chosen for comparison of the degradation dynamics. Scanning UV microspectrophotometry (UMSP) analyses of lignin distribution in wood cells revealed that the linkages of lignin and polysaccharides were already disrupted in the early period of fungal attack. An increase in the lignin absorption A280 value from 0.24 (control) to 0.44 in decayed wood was attributed to its oxidative modification which has been proposed to be generated by Fenton reaction derived ROS. The wood weight loss in the initial degradation period was 2%, whilst cellulose and lignin content decreased by 6.7% and 1%, respectively. Lignin methoxyl (–OCH3) content decreased from 15.1% (control) to 14.2% in decayed wood. Diffuse reflectance Fourier-transform infrared (DRIFT) spectroscopy corroborated the moderate loss in the hemicellulose and lignin degradation accompanying degradation. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectra and spin trapping confirmed the generation of ROS, such as hydroxyl radicals (HO), in the early wood degradation period. Our results showed that irreversible changes in wood structure started immediately after wood colonisation by fungal hyphae and the results generated here will assist in the understanding of the biochemical mechanisms of wood biodegradation by brown-rot fungi with the ultimate aim of developing novel wood protection methods.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The actinomycete strain Streptomyces griseus B1 isolated from soil, when grown on cellulose powder as submerged culture produced high levels of all the three components i.e. filter paper lyase (FPase), CMCellulase and β-glucosidase of the cellulolytic enzyme system. FP activity and CMCellulase were present only extracellularly, while β-glucosidase was both intra- and extra-cellular. It produced highest FPase activity when grown on hardwood powder under submerged culture. It was unable to use lignin monomers (ferulic acid, vanillic acid and syringic acid) as carbon source. While growing on hardwood and softwood powders under solid-state conditions, it depleted them of cellulose (36.3 in the case of softwood and 14.4 in the case of hardwood). It also caused partial loss of lignin content in both the substrates by solubilizing them. These solubilized lignins could be recovered as acid precipitable polymeric lignins (APPL) from extracts of wood powders upon acidification. Extracts of inoculated wood powders yielded higher amounts of APPL than uninoculated controls. Also, the APPLs from Streptomyces-treated wood powders differed from control APPLs in their molecular weight distribution, as observed from their elution pattern using Sephadex G-100.  相似文献   

13.
Selective Degradation of Wood Components by White-Rot Fungi   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
In order to find naturally occurring white-rot fungi which preferentially degrade lignin. 25 different species of such fungi were cultivated on pine wood blocks and on kraft lignin agar plates with and without cellulose. Due to differences in phenol oxidase reactions on the kraft lignin agar plates, the 25 fungi could be divided into two groups, 1 and 2, which also differed in other properties. The three Group I fungi Sporotrichum pulverulentum, Phanerochaete sp. L1 and Polyporus dichrous produced high levels of endo-l,4-β-glucanase and cellobiose:quinone oxidoreductase in shaking cellulose flasks and a low level of phenol oxidase in standing wood meal flasks, The four fungi Merulius tremellosus, Phlebia radiata, Pycuoporus cinnabarinus and Pleurotus ostreatus from Group 2, on the other hand, produced low levels of endo-1,4-β-glucanase and cellobiose:.quinone oxidoreductase in the cellulose. flasks and a high level of phenol oxidase in the wood meal flasks. Analyses of pine wood blocks degraded by the above-mentioned fungi in the presence of either malt extract, asparagine or NH4H2PO4 revealed that malt extract gave good lignin degradation. In the presence of this nutrient source. P. cinnabarinus, at 3.4% weight loss, even degraded 12.5% lignin without loss of cellulose or mannan. No common degradation pattern was, however, obtained using mall extract, asparagine or NH4H2PO4, It is suggested that while-rot fungi, which preferentially degrade lignin, may be found among Group 2 fungi producing large amounts of phenol oxidases.  相似文献   

14.
Agarwal UP 《Planta》2006,224(5):1141-1153
A detailed understanding of the structural organization of the cell wall of vascular plants is important from both the perspectives of plant biology and chemistry and of commercial utilization. A state-of-the-art 633-nm laser-based confocal Raman microscope was used to determine the distribution of cell wall components in the cross section of black spruce wood in situ. Chemical information from morphologically distinct cell wall regions was obtained and Raman images of lignin and cellulose spatial distribution were generated. While cell corner (CC) lignin concentration was the highest on average, lignin concentration in compound middle lamella (CmL) was not significantly different from that in secondary wall (S2 and S2–S3). Images generated using the 1,650 cm−1 band showed that coniferaldehyde and coniferyl alcohol distribution followed that of lignin and no particular cell wall layer/region was therefore enriched in the ethylenic residue. In contrast, cellulose distribution showed the opposite pattern—low concentration in CC and CmL and high in S2 regions. Nevertheless, cellulose concentration varied significantly in some areas, and concentrations of both lignin and cellulose were high in other areas. Though intensity maps of lignin and cellulose distributions are currently interpreted solely in terms of concentration differences, the effect of orientation needs to be carefully considered to reveal the organization of the wood cell wall.The Forest Products Laboratory is maintained in cooperation with the University of Wisconsin. This article was written and prepared by U.S. Government employees on official time, and it is therefore in the public domain and not subject to copyright. The use of trade or firm names in this publication is for reader information and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Department of Agriculture of any product or service.  相似文献   

15.
Sheer enormity of lignocellulosics makes them potential feedstock for biofuel production but, their conversion into fermentable sugars is a major hurdle. They have to be pretreated physically, chemically, or biologically to be used by fermenting organisms for production of ethanol. Each lignocellulosic substrate is a complex mix of cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin, bound in a matrix. While cellulose and hemicellulose yield fermentable sugars, lignin is the most recalcitrant polymer, consisting of phenyl-propanoid units. Many microorganisms in nature are able to attack and degrade lignin, thus making access to cellulose easy. Such organisms are abundantly found in forest leaf litter/composts and especially include the wood rotting fungi, actinomycetes and bacteria. These microorganisms possess enzyme systems to attack, depolymerize and degrade the polymers in lignocellulosic substrates. Current pretreatment research is targeted towards developing processes which are mild, economical and environment friendly facilitating subsequent saccharification of cellulose and its fermentation to ethanol. Besides being the critical step, pretreatment is also cost intensive. Biological treatments with white rot fungi and Streptomyces have been studied for delignification of pulp, increasing digestibility of lignocellulosics for animal feed and for bioremediation of paper mill effluents. Such lignocellulolytic organisms can prove extremely useful in production of bioethanol when used for removal of lignin from lignocellulosic substrate and also for cellulase production. Our studies on treatment of hardwood and softwood residues with Streptomyces griseus isolated from leaf litter showed that it enhanced the mild alkaline solubilisation of lignins and also produced high levels of the cellulase complex when growing on wood substrates. Lignin loss (Klason lignin) observed was 10.5 and 23.5% in case of soft wood and hard wood, respectively. Thus, biological pretreatment process for lignocellulosic substrate using lignolytic organisms such as actinomycetes and white rot fungi can be developed for facilitating efficient enzymatic digestibility of cellulose.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract: In this review properties of cellobiose:quinone oxidoreductase (CBQ) and cellobiose oxidase (CbO) are presented and their possible involvement in lignin and cellulose degradation is discussed. Although these enzymes are produced by many different fungi, their importance for wood-degrading fungi is the topic here. CBQ is a FAD enzyme, while CbO also contains a heine group of the cytochrome b type. Protease activity is reported to convert CbO to CBQ. During oxidation of cellobiose (emanating from cellulose) to cellobiono-l,5-lactone, both enzymes reduce quinones produced by laccase and peroxidase during lignin degradation to the corresponding phenols. Many phenoxy and cation radicals are also reduced. Quinone reduction is more rapid than oxygen reduction, although oxygen is slowly reduced to superoxide and/or hydrogen peroxide. Thus, a more appropriate name for CbO is cellobiose dehydrogenase. CbO also reduces Fe(III) and together with hydrogen peroxide produced by the enzyme Fenton's reagent may be formed, resulting in hydroxyl radical production. This radical can degrade both lignin and cellulose, possibly indicating that cellobiose oxidase has a central role in degradation of wood by wood-degrading fungi.  相似文献   

17.
Leaf‐cutting ants are a very specialized group of ants that cultivate fungus gardens in their nests, from which they obtain food. The current opinion is that the fungus cultivated by leaf‐cutting ants digests cellulose. Here we reassess the cellulose‐degrading capability of the fungus by using two complementary approaches tested in four Attini species (genera Atta and Acromyrmex): (1) ability of fungus to grow in cellulose; and (2) lignin/cellulose ratio in the refuse material dumped outside the nest, as an indicator of cellulose consumption. We found that (1) the fungus did not grow in cellulose, and (2) the lignin/cellulose ratio was much lower in the ants' refuse than in material digested by cellulose‐digesting organisms, such as brown‐rot fungus, termites, and ruminant mammals. This evidence strongly suggests the inability of the fungus to degrade cellulose. Therefore, the fungus–ant symbiosis and the ecological role of leaf‐cutting ants need to be reconsidered.  相似文献   

18.
19.
  • 1.1. Termites and cockroaches are excellent models for studying the role of symbionts in cellulose digestion in insects: they eat cellulose in a variety of forms and may or may not have symbionts.
  • 2.2. The wood-eating cockroach, Panesthia cribrata, can be maintained indefinitely, free of microorganisms, on a diet of crystalline cellulose. Under these conditions the RQ is 1, indicating that the cockroach is surviving on glucose produced by endogenous cellulase.
  • 3.3. The in vitro rate at which glucose is produced from crystalline cellulose by gut extracts from P. cribrata and Nasutitermes walkeri is comparable to the in vivo production of CO2 in these insects, clearly indicating that the rate of glucose production from crystalline cellulose is sufficient for their needs.
  • 4.4. In all termites and cockroaches examined, cellulase activity was found in the salivary glands and predominantly in the foregut and midgut. These regions are the normal sites of secretion of digestive enzymes and are either devoid of microorganisms (salivary glands) or have very low numbers.
  • 5.5. Endogeneous cellulases from termites and cockroaches consist of multiple endo-β-1,4-glucanase (EC 3.2.1.4) and β-1,4-glucosidase (EC 3.2.1.21) components. There is no evidence that an exo-β-1,4-glucanase (cellobiohydrolase) (EC 3.2.1.91) is involved in, or needed for, the production of glucose from crystalline cellulose in termites or cockroaches as the endo-β-1,4-glucanase components are active against both crystalline cellulose and carboxymethylcellulose.
  • 6.6. There is no evidence that bacteria are involved in cellulose digestion in termites and cockroaches. The cellulase associated with the fungus garden of M. michaelseni is distinct from that in the midgut; there is little indication that the fungal enzymes are acquired or needed. Lower termites such as Coptotermes lacteus have Protozoa in their hindgut which produce a cellulase(s) quite distinct from that in the foregut and midgut.
  相似文献   

20.
Unravelling cell wall formation in the woody dicot stem   总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20  
Populus is presented as a model system for the study of wood formation (xylogenesis). The formation of wood (secondary xylem) is an ordered developmental process involving cell division, cell expansion, secondary wall deposition, lignification and programmed cell death. Because wood is formed in a variable environment and subject to developmental control, xylem cells are produced that differ in size, shape, cell wall structure, texture and composition. Hormones mediate some of the variability observed and control the process of xylogenesis. High-resolution analysis of auxin distribution across cambial region tissues, combined with the analysis of transgenic plants with modified auxin distribution, suggests that auxin provides positional information for the exit of cells from the meristem and probably also for the duration of cell expansion. Poplar sequencing projects have provided access to genes involved in cell wall formation. Genes involved in the biosynthesis of the carbohydrate skeleton of the cell wall are briefly reviewed. Most progress has been made in characterizing pectin methyl esterases that modify pectins in the cambial region. Specific expression patterns have also been found for expansins, xyloglucan endotransglycosylases and cellulose synthases, pointing to their role in wood cell wall formation and modification. Finally, by studying transgenic plants modified in various steps of the monolignol biosynthetic pathway and by localizing the expression of various enzymes, new insight into the lignin biosynthesis in planta has been gained.  相似文献   

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