Read the
magazine
story to find out more.
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ARS chemist Charles Lee evaluates wavy lines of
bacteria, determining their ability to produce enzymes that break down plants
into the basis for biofuels. Click the image for more information about
it.
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"Superenzymes" Could Streamline Biofuels Refining
By Marcia
Wood
October 22, 2008
Stain removers that make even the most stubborn spots on your clothes vanish
in the wash may be powered by molecules known as enzymes.
Agricultural Research Service (ARS)
scientists at Albany, Calif., are in search of similarly strong, fast-acting
enzymes. But the ones they want would be put to work not in your laundry room,
but instead at biofuels refineries, where the enzymes' job would be to break
down the cell walls of bioenergy crops such as switchgrass.
The tight matrix of compoundscellulose, hemicellulose, and ligninin the
walls of switchgrass cells is difficult for familiar enzymes to disassemble.
That's a factor that makes refining cellulosic ethanol more costly and complex
than making ethanol from starch.
The search for enzymes that excel in degrading plant cell walls has led
Albany research chemist
Charles
Lee, with the ARS
Bioproduct
Chemistry and Engineering Research Unit, to probe dank soil beneath
25-foot-high piles of decaying rice straw, and to carefully draw samples of
murky liquid from dairy-waste lagoons.
Back at the lab, Lee and colleagues scrutinize these and other
samplesa miscellany of anonymous microbesto determine whether any
of them contain genes that have the blueprint for enzymes of interest.
From one dairy lagoon sample, they found a microbe with a gene that they've
named xyn8. It contains the blueprint for a xylanase, an enzyme that
specializes in breaking down xylan, a troublesome component of the
hemicellulose in plant cell walls.
But there's even more to like about this xylanase: It works well in
temperatures regarded as "cold" in the biofuels business. Cold-loving
xylanases would sidestep the need for the costly heating typically needed at
today's biorefineries.
Read
more about the research in the October 2008 issue of Agricultural Research
magazine.
ARS is a scientific research agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.