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Dive into the research topics where Michael H. Studer is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael H. Studer.


Green Chemistry | 2015

Lignin repolymerisation in spruce autohydrolysis pretreatment increases cellulase deactivation

Thomas Pielhop; Gastón O. Larrazábal; Michael H. Studer; Simone Brethauer; Christoph-M. Seidel; Philipp Rudolf von Rohr

This study presents a modified autohydrolysis pretreatment which helps to overcome the recalcitrance of softwood for enzymatic hydrolysis of its cellulose. Autohydrolysis pretreatments of spruce wood were performed with 2-naphthol, which prevents lignin repolymerisation reactions, thereby increasing the enzymatic digestibility of cellulose by up to 64%. The negative influence of repolymerised lignin structures on enzymatic hydrolysis was confirmed by the addition of resorcinol in autohydrolysis, which is known to promote repolymerisation reactions and decreased the biomass digestibility. Several analyses were performed to study the underlying mechanism of this effect on hydrolysis, indicating that cellulolytic enzymes are adsorbed and deactivated especially by repolymerised lignin structures, which accounts for the high differences in biomass digestibility. It was shown that lignin repolymerisation significantly increases its specific surface area through modification of the lignin nanostructure, which is supposed to increase the unproductive binding of enzymes.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2018

Consolidated bioprocessing of lignocellulosic biomass to lactic acid by a synthetic fungal-bacterial consortium

Robert L. Shahab; Jeremy S. Luterbacher; Simone Brethauer; Michael H. Studer

Consolidated bioprocessing (CBP) of lignocellulosic feedstocks to platform chemicals requires complex metabolic processes, which are commonly executed by single genetically engineered microorganisms. Alternatively, synthetic consortia can be employed to compartmentalize the required metabolic functions among different specialized microorganisms as demonstrated in this work for the direct production of lactic acid from lignocellulosic biomass. We composed an artificial cross‐kingdom consortium and co‐cultivated the aerobic fungus Trichoderma reesei for the secretion of cellulolytic enzymes with facultative anaerobic lactic acid bacteria. We engineered ecological niches to enable the formation of a spatially structured biofilm. Up to 34.7 gL−1 lactic acid could be produced from 5% (w/w) microcrystalline cellulose. Challenges in converting pretreated lignocellulosic biomass include the presence of inhibitors, the formation of acetic acid and carbon catabolite repression. In the CBP consortium hexoses and pentoses were simultaneously consumed and metabolic cross‐feeding enabled the in situ degradation of acetic acid. As a result, superior product purities were achieved and 19.8 gL−1 (85.2% of the theoretical maximum) of lactic acid could be produced from non‐detoxified steam‐pretreated beech wood. These results demonstrate the potential of consortium‐based CBP technologies for the production of high value chemicals from pretreated lignocellulosic biomass in a single step.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2017

A Multispecies Fungal Biofilm Approach to Enhance the Celluloyltic Efficiency of Membrane Reactors for Consolidated Bioprocessing of Plant Biomass

Charilaos Xiros; Michael H. Studer

The constraints and advantages in cellulolytic enzymes production by fungal biofilms for a consolidated bioconversion process were investigated during this study. The biofilm cultivations were carried out in reactors designed for consolidated bioprocessing Multispecies Biofilm Membrane reactors, (MBM) where an aerobic fungal biofilm produces the lignocellulolytic enzymes while a fermenting microorganism forms the fermentation product at anaerobic conditions. It was shown that although mycelial growth was limited in the MBM reactors compared to submerged cultivations, the secretion of cellulolytic enzymes per cell dry weight was higher. When Trichoderma reesei was used as the sole enzyme producer, cellobiose accumulated in the liquid medium as the result of the deficiency of β-glucosidase in the fungal secretome. To enhance β-glucosidase activity, T. reesei was co-cultivated with A. phoenicis which is a β-glucosidase overproducer. The two fungi formed a multispecies biofilm which produced a balanced cellulolytic cocktail for the saccharification of plant biomass. The mixed biofilm reached a 2.5 fold increase in β-glucosidase production, compared to the single T. reesei biofilm. The enzymatic systems of single and mixed biofilms were evaluated regarding their efficiency on cellulosic substrates degradation. Washed solids from steam pretreated beechwood, as well as microcrystalline cellulose were used as the substrates. The enzymatic system of the multispecies biofilm released four times more glucose than the enzymatic system of T. reesei alone from both substrates and hydrolyzed 78 and 60% of the cellulose content of washed solids from beechwood and microcrystalline cellulose, respectively.


Insurance Mathematics & Economics | 2003

Short-term risk management using stochastic Taylor expansions under Lévy models

Wim Schoutens; Michael H. Studer

Abstract The Taylor expansion is a powerful tool in the analysis of deterministic functions. A stochastic Taylor expansion together with some general existence results have been developed for diffusion processes and some other classes of processes. We explicitly calculate a stochastic Taylor expansion for multivariate Poisson processes. An extension to diffusion processes with Poisson jumps is straightforward. The expansion is used for two financial applications in the context of risk management.


Biotechnology for Biofuels | 2016

Steam explosion pretreatment of softwood: the effect of the explosive decompression on enzymatic digestibility

Thomas Pielhop; Janick Amgarten; Philipp Rudolf von Rohr; Michael H. Studer


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2008

Novel membrane bioreactor: Able to cope with fluctuating loads, poorly water soluble VOCs, and biomass accumulation

Michael H. Studer; Philipp Rudolf von Rohr


Faraday Discussions | 2017

The influence of the explosive decompression in steam-explosion pretreatment on the enzymatic digestibility of different biomasses

Christoph-Maximilian Seidel; Thomas Pielhop; Michael H. Studer; Philipp Rudolf von Rohr


Archive | 2011

Process for the direct production of fermentation products from biomasses in a biofilm reactor

Michael H. Studer; Simone Brethauer Studer


Biotechnology for Biofuels | 2017

Pilot-scale steam explosion pretreatment with 2-naphthol to overcome high softwood recalcitrance

Thomas Pielhop; Janick Amgarten; Michael H. Studer; Philipp Rudolf von Rohr


Biomass & Bioenergy | 2017

Application potential of a carbocation scavenger in autohydrolysis and dilute acid pretreatment to overcome high softwood recalcitrance

Thomas Pielhop; Claudio Reinhard; Christian Hecht; Luca Del Bene; Michael H. Studer; Philipp Rudolf von Rohr

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Jeremy S. Luterbacher

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Robert L. Shahab

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Simone Brethauer

Bern University of Applied Sciences

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Wim Schoutens

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Charilaos Xiros

Chalmers University of Technology

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Bartosz Rozmysłowicz

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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