Enzymatic demethylation of lignin for potential biobased polymer applications

Publication date: Available online 2 July 2019Source: Fungal Biology ReviewsAuthor(s): Balaji VenkatesagowdaAbstractLignin is a highly methylated, recalcitrant biopolymer available aplenty in nature, and is highly heteropolymer in nature, but yet it has been an under-utilized biopolymer. Modifying it chemically, biologically or enzymatically could render it a good candidate for phenol formaldehyde resin or into fine chemicals, fuels, and plastics applications. Lignin demethylation is facilitated by the enzymes called the O-demethylases, which are able to strip-off of the –OCH3 group in lignin, that give rise to the more widely accessible phenolic hydroxyls groups. Biological demethylation of lignins can be accomplished by means of the microorganisms, such as the white-rot, soft-rot and brown-rot fungi, besides some species of bacteria. Although the enzymes responsible for the lignin demethylation process have not been identified and purified adequately, it is perhaps possible that the O-demethylases, which have the ability to remove the O-methyl groups at the C-3 and (or) C-4 positions of the benzyl ring of low molecular weight lignin-like model compounds (LMCs) and lignin makes them the suitable candidate. These LMCs resemble the aromatic moieties inherent in the molecular structure of lignins, such as the vanillate, syringate, and veratrate. Thus, these enzymes are known as vanillate-O-demethylases, syringate O-demethylases, veratrate O-demethylases and Tetrahydrofolate (...
Source: Fungal Biology Reviews - Category: Biology Source Type: research