Interactions of Chitin and Lignin Thin Films with Other Molecules
Files
TR Number
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
As two of the most abundant natural polymers, chitin and lignin not only play critical roles in fungal and plant cell walls but are also important functional materials and promising feedstocks for a variety of chemicals. This study investigated the interactions of chitin and lignin thin films with several other molecules via a quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D) and atomic force microscopy (AFM).
Interactions between chitin and family 18 chitinases are vital for understanding bacterial invasion of fungi and human defense against fungal infection. Regenerated chitin (RChitin) thin films were prepared via chemical conversion and spin-coating. Changes in their mass and viscoelasticity were monitored by a QCM-D in real time during incubation with family 18 chitinases. The optimal temperature for the activity of chitinases on surfaces was lower than bulk solution studies in the literature. Family 18 chitinases showed greater activity on dissolved chitin oligosaccharides while family 19 chitinases showed greater activity on RChitin films, which was attributed to chitin-binding domains in family 19 chitinases.
Catechyl lignin (C-lignin) is a promising substrate for lignin valorization. Films of C-lignin were synthesized via adsorbed horseradish peroxidase-catalyzed dehydrogenative polymerization (DHP) of caffeyl alcohol (C-alcohol), and degraded through Fenton chemistry with all processes observed by a QCM-D and AFM. The synthetic rate and yield for C-DHP films was lower than DHP films made from coniferyl alcohol (G-alcohol) and p-coumaryl alcohol (H-alcohol). The C-DHP film underwent complete Fenton mediated degradation in contrast to the G-DHP and H-DHP films regardless of their thicknesses.
Conventional lignin suffers from recalcitrance to degradation. Copolymer lignin films were synthesized through surface-initiated copolymerization of C and G or C, G and H monolignols. As the concentration of C-alcohol increased, the percentage degradation of the synthesized DHP copolymer films increased. Almost all the CG-DHP or CGH-DHP films were degraded when the percentage of the C-alcohol in the polymerization feed was ≥ 75% and ≥ 60% for CG-DHP and CGH-DHP, respectively.