Lignocellulose, the structural component of plant cells, is a major agricultural by-product and the most abundant terrestrial source of biopolymers on Earth. The complex and insoluble nature of lignocellulose limits its conversion into value-added commodities and, currently, efficient transformation requires expensive pre-treatments and high loadings of enzymes. Here we report on lignocellulolytic enzyme discovery from Parascedosporium putredinis NO1 during its deconstruction of wheat straw probing both the cultural supernatant and selecting for proteins bound to insoluble component of the growth culture.
[doi:10.25345/C5DX1X]
[dataset license: CC0 1.0 Universal (CC0 1.0)]
Keywords: Lignocellulose ; Parascedosporium putredinis ; Biotin-labelling
Principal Investigators: (in alphabetical order) |
Neil Bruce, University of York, UK |
Submitting User: | NicolaOates |
Number of Files: | |
Total Size: | |
Spectra: | |
Subscribers: | |
Owner | Reanalyses | |
---|---|---|
Experimental Design | ||
Conditions:
|
||
Biological Replicates:
|
||
Technical Replicates:
|
||
Identification Results | ||
Proteins (Human, Remapped):
|
||
Proteins (Reported):
|
||
Peptides:
|
||
Variant Peptides:
|
||
PSMs:
|
||
Quantification Results | ||
Differential Proteins:
|
||
Quantified Proteins:
|
||
Browse Dataset Files | Browse Results |
FTP Download Link (click to copy):
|