2010 Annual Meeting

(374aj) Microscale Platforms for High-Throughput Lignocellulosic Biomass Assays

Authors

Rajiv Bharadwaj - Presenter, Sandia National Laboratories, Joint BioEnergy Institute
Anup K. Singh - Presenter, Sandia National Laboratories
April Wong - Presenter, Sandia National Laboratories
Seema Singh - Presenter, Joint BioEnergy Institute
Bradley Holmes - Presenter, The Joint BioEnergy Institute
Blake A. Simmons - Presenter, Joint BioEnergy Institute
paul D. Adams - Presenter, The Joint BioEnergy Institute
Manfred Auer - Presenter, The Joint BioEnergy Institute
Bernhard Knierim - Presenter, The Joint BioEnergy Institute


The high cost of lignocellulolytic enzymes is one of the main barriers towards the development of economically competitive biorefineries. Enzyme engineering can be used to significantly increase the production rate as well as specific activity of enzymes. However, the success of enzyme optimization efforts is currently limited by a lack of robust high-throughput (HTP) cellulase screening platforms for insoluble pretreated lignocellulosic substrates. We have developed a cost-effective microscale HTP enzyme-screening platform for ionic liquid (IL) pretreated lignocellulose. By performing in-situ biomass regeneration in micro-volumes, we can volumetrically meter biomass (sub-mg loading) and also precisely control the amount of residual IL for engineering novel IL-tolerant cellulases. Further, we have developed a microfluidic capillary electrophoresis device for rapid, precise, and high-throughput characterization of glycans for enzyme screening. The run-time per sample is around 60 s (> 10X faster than HPLC) and the detection sensitivity is around 1 amol. The proposed method can be used to screen individual cellulases as well as to develop novel cellulase cocktails.