The γ-valerolactone (GVL) pretreatment is one of the leading solvent-based methods for producing high-quality lignin under mild conditions. However, the glucan conversion yield from GVL pretreated biomass remains unsatisfactory. To explore the discrepancies between the relatively low glucan conversion and high lignin extraction, we conducted GVL-HCl and NaOH pretreatments on poplar and investigated their effects on lignin content and location, as well as on enzymatic hydrolysis of poplar cell walls at the subcellular level. Under designated pretreatment conditions of GVL-HCl (90% GVL, 0.1 M HCl, 100 °C, 1 h) and NaOH (1 M, 121 °C, 2 h), the glucan conversion yields were 69.4% and 95.8%, with lignin removal rates of 67.8% and 47.7%, respectively. Four types of GFP-labeled carbohydrate binding modules were used to identify different forms of cellulose in the pretreated cell walls. The overall binding intensities to pretreated poplar were stronger for NaOH compared to GVL-HCl pretreatment. Stimulated Raman scattering microscopy imaging revealed that GVL-HCl preferentially extracted lignin from the compound middle lamella and cell corner areas, while NaOH effectively dissolved lignin in the secondary cell walls. Real-time imaging of cellulase degradation of pretreated cell walls further indicated that digestion started from both the cell lumen and the compound middle lamella areas for GVL, whereas it occurred uniformly across the secondary cell walls for NaOH. Our findings suggest that the location of lignin removal during pretreatment is crucial for enzymatic cellulose degradation, in addition to the total amount of lignin extraction.
Keywords: CBM–GFP binding; GVL–HCl pretreatment; enzyme digestibility; lignin removal; stimulated Raman scattering microscopy (SRS); subcellular location.
© 2025 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.