Some key crop species, such as maize, wheat, and rice, have been domesticated from about 10,000 years ago, and have been under continuous selection for important agronomic and quality traits. Whereas progenitor species of many crops are unrecognizable from their domesticated counterparts, many of our potential energy crops are at best just a few crosses away from the wild accessions. Miscanthus, switchgrass, energy cane, and willow are just beginning the process of domestication. Thus, there is equivalent potential for improvement of fuel yield per unit of land through breeding of energy crops, but this must be accomplished in an abbreviated timeframe to have an effect on global climate change [
32,
33]. One trait to improve upon is the ease of biomass deconstruction to simple sugars that are suitable for conversion to a liquid fuel [
34]. Many species have demonstrated genetic variation in digestibility for both forage quality and enzymatic digestion, thus traditional plant breeding facilitated by suitable phenotypic assays, such as the bioconversion approach described here, will lead to a more efficient biofuels industry [
3,
35]. The overall content and composition of cell-wall lignin has proven to be a significant determining factor for lignocellulosic biomass digestibility [
7,
8]. In the 1920s, agronomists identified the first lignin mutants in maize as genotypes with characteristic browning of the leaf midrib, hence the mutant name '
brown midrib' [
36]. Negative perturbation of multiple points in the lignin biosynthetic pathway results in increased digestibility in numerous species including maize, sorghum, switchgrass, tall fescue, alfalfa, tobacco, and poplar [
4,
7]. In both sorghum and maize, mutations in the
CAD or
COMT genes have been identified as causes for the
brown midrib phenotype [
37-
39].
The bioconversion assay described here was developed using a well-characterized set of sorghum
bmr NILs, the same samples previously described by Dien. [
23]. In this study, the Klason lignin content was 15% lower in the
bmr-6 and
bmr-12 single mutants than in wild-type sorghum, and nearly twice as low (27%) in the
bmr-6/
bmr-12 double mutant. Interestingly, no other differences were between the NILs were seen for carbohydrate content or non-lignin-associated measures of
in vitro digestibility, such as neutral or acid detergent fiber [
23]. Therefore, the differential effects of
C. phytofermentans inoculation on NILs is not due to the total amount of digestible sugars in the NILs, but rather the accessibility of those polysaccharides to enzymatic digestion, which is therefore strongly influenced by lignin content. Fermentation of the same material by
S. cerevisiae after dilute acid pre-treatment and cellulase and β-glucosidase enzymatic digestion produced improvements in ethanol-conversion efficiency of 11% and 17% for the single and double mutants, respectively [
23]. The differences in ethanol production by NILs digested by
S. cerevisiae were far less pronounced than those digested with
C. phytofermentans. Considering that xylose yield was roughly constant across the NILs, and that
S. cerevisiae is capable of fermenting hexoses only, it is likely that the differences in ethanol yield were due to differential enzymatic release of glucose.
C. phytofermentans digests plant biomass with secreted cellulolytic enzymes, and subsequently imports and metabolizes pentoses and hexoses. Thus, ethanol yield is a combined measure of the digestibility of hemicelluloses and cellulose.
To gain a greater understanding into why ethanol yields might be greater with the
bmr mutants, we assayed the polysaccharide content both before and after inoculation, using a comprehensive collection of 147 glycan-directed monoclonal antibodies to quantify changes in most major classes of cell-wall polysaccharides [
29]. Considering the minute quantities of pectins in sorghum stems [
40], we focused on changes in the abundance of xylan, which accounted for a substantial proportion of the overall biomass content [
23]. The relative amount of extractable xylan differed between the NILs, as did the difference in extractable xylan metabolized by
C. phytofermentans. Therefore, the increased quantities of ethanol produced from the
bmr mutants is in part due to the increased accessibility of xylan to hydrolysis.
Although it was apparent that there are genetic differences in plant properties that influence feedstock digestibility, several analyses of sorghum, maize, and alfalfa lignin mutants revealed genotype × chemical pre-treatment interaction effects. In other words, the magnitude of the differences between genotypes or even their rank order will change depending on the method of pre-treatment. Enzymatic release of glucose from the maize lignin mutant
bm1 was equivalent to that of wild type after alkali pre-treatment, but significantly greater after acid pre-treatment [
19]. Relative to untreated sorghum, the difference between wild-type sorghum and the sorghum lignin mutants
bmr-3 and
bmr-12 diminished after dilute acid pre-treatment [
41]. In the same study, mutations in other loci resulting in a
bmr phenotype produced little or no change in response to pre-treatment. Similarly, the magnitude of the difference in enzymatic saccharification between wild-type alfalfa and plants downregulated for several different lignin genes varied in response to acid pre-treatment [
8]. In the case of plants downregulated for
CCoAMT, a significant difference from wild type was seen only in the absence of pre-treatment. By contrast, the difference in hydrolysis efficiency between
C4H and
HCT downregulated plants and wild type was twice as large in the absence of pre-treatment. After treatment with 15% ammonium hydroxide the hydrolysis yield potential of a large panel of sorghum accessions ranged from the same level as that of the untreated sorghum up to an approximately threefold increase over the untreated plants [
42]. The goal of pre-treatment is to improve the accessibility of the polysaccharides to hydrolysis [
43]. Clearly, there is a complex relationship between efficiency of feedstock utilization and pre-treatment. In this study, we attempted to maximize the ease of conducting the bioconversion quality assay and to maximize the sensitivity of the assay to detect genetic differences. Although small differences in genetic potential may not be relevant in certain industrial scenarios, detection remains important for development of energy crops. Consistent and incremental progress in modern plant breeding is the product of changing the frequencies of alleles with small additive effects. Thus, a sensitive assay is required to detect such variation, and certain pretreatments may diminish sensitivity.
We measured significant genetic variation among collections of two plant taxa considered to have excellent potential as energy crops, sorghum and shrub willow, and a model for grasses,
B. distachyon [
44-
46]. The variation was notable considering that the samples tested by no means represent the overall genetic variation within each taxon. Thus, we would expect a wider range of phenotypic variation with an increase in sample number and diversity. The ethanol yields from sorghum were similar to those from willow, ranging from 26.5 to 39.4 mg ethanol/g feedstock. For willow, no significant correlations were seen between ethanol yield and biomass compositional data (Serapiglia and Smart, unpublished data). Most of the variation could be attributed to genetics rather than to experimental differences; consequently, routine gain from selection could be expected in the range of variation detected. At the same time, the assay could clearly identify differences between major genetic perturbations in biomass composition (typical of the
bmr mutations) and continuous variation among natural and segregating populations. The most digestible genotypes from all three biofuel crop taxa yielded approximately 25% more ethanol that the most recalcitrant. This is only slightly less than the differences between wild-type sorghum and the single-gene
bmr mutants. The quantity of material tested is well within the amount of stem biomass typically produced by a single plant of rapid-cycling model plants such as
Arabidopsis thaliana and
B. distachyon. We are currently using this system in a 96-well format, which, combined with a commercial robotics preparation [
19,
22], is capable of throughput levels required by a core feedstock testing facility for plant breeding and mutant screens.