Enzymatic deconstruction of plant biomass by fungal enzymes.
Christian P Kubicek, Eva M Kubicek
Author Information
Christian P Kubicek: Vienna University of Technology, Institute of Chemical Engineering, Getreidemarkt 9/166.5, 1060 Vienna, Austria. Electronic address: peter.kubicek@tuwien.ac.at.
Eva M Kubicek: Vienna University of Technology, Institute of Chemical Engineering, Getreidemarkt 9/166.5, 1060 Vienna, Austria.
Lignocellulosic plant biomass is the world's most abundant carbon source and has consequently attracted attention as a renewable resource for production of biofuels and commodity chemicals. Still the process is economically not fit enough to compete with then use of fossil resources, and the costs associated with enzymatic hydrolysis and product recovery are the major obstacle. The discovery of the role of non-hydrolytic enzymes in lignocellulose hydrolysis has recently contributed significant improvements to hydrolysis but also added new challenges to the biomass to ethanol process. Transfer of the new insights to the industrial scale and shaping the enzymes to tolerate associated adverse conditions has now shown first success, thus optimizing the economy of cellulosic ethanol (or other biofuel) production.