- Peroxidase activity can dictate the in vitro lignin dehydrogenative polymer structure.
Peroxidase activity can dictate the in vitro lignin dehydrogenative polymer structure.
The objective of this study was to assess the influence of the peroxidase/coniferyl alcohol (CA) ratio on the dehydrogenation polymer (DHP) synthesis. The soluble and unsoluble fractions of horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-catalyzed CA dehydrogenation mixtures were recovered in various proportions, depending on the polymerization mode (Zutropf ZT/Zulauf ZL) and HRP/CA ratio (1.6-1100purpurogallin U mmol(-1)). The ZL mode yielded 0-57%/initial CA of unsoluble condensed DHPs (thioacidolysis yields <200micromolg(-1)) with a proportion of uncondensed CA end groups increasing with the HRP/CA ratio (7.2-55.5%/total uncondensed CA). Systematically lower polymer yields (0-49%/initial CA) were obtained for the ZT mode. In that mode, a negative correlation was established between the beta-O-4 content (thioacidolysis yields: 222-660micromolg(-1)) and the HRP/CA ratio. In both modes, decreasing the HRP/CA ratio below 18Ummol(-1) favoured an end-wise polymerization process evidenced by the occurrence of tri-, tetra- and pentamers involving at least one beta-O-4 bond. At low ratio, the unsoluble ZT DHP was found to better approximate natural lignins than DHPs previously synthesized with traditional methods. Besides its possible implication in lignin biosynthesis, peroxidase activity is a crucial parameter accounting for the structural variations of in vitro DHPs.