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Dive into the research topics where Riki Shiroma is active.

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Featured researches published by Riki Shiroma.


Bioresource Technology | 2010

A novel lime pretreatment for subsequent bioethanol production from rice straw--calcium capturing by carbonation (CaCCO) process.

Jeung-yil Park; Riki Shiroma; Muhammad Imran Al-Haq; Ying Zhang; Masakazu Ike; Yumiko Arai-Sanoh; Atsuhi Ida; Motohiko Kondo; Ken Tokuyasu

In order to establish an efficient bioethanol production system for rice straw, we developed a novel lime-pretreatment process (CaCCO process) that did not require a solid-liquid-separation step. This process adopted a step in which after pretreatment lime was neutralized by carbonation, resulting in a final pH of about 6. CaCO(3) produced by the process was kept in the reaction vessel, and no significant inhibitory effects on enzymatic saccharification and fermentation were observed. In the CaCCO process, solubilized carbohydrates, such as xylan, starch, and sucrose were also kept in the vessel, enabling high recoveries of monomeric sugars. Simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (SSF) of pretreated rice straw, 10% (g-rice straw/g-water), using Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Pichia stipitis yielded 19.1 g L(-1) ethanol that was 74% of the theoretical yield from glucose and xylose. Thus, this process represents a novel pretreatment method to utilize not only cellulose but also xylan, starch, and sucrose from biomass.


Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2009

Efficient Recovery of Glucose and Fructose via Enzymatic Saccharification of Rice Straw with Soft Carbohydrates

Jeung-yil Park; Tomoko Seyama; Riki Shiroma; Masakazu Ike; Sathaporn Srichuwong; Kenji Nagata; Yumiko Arai-Sanoh; Motohiko Kondo; Ken Tokuyasu

Soft carbohydrates, defined as readily-recoverable carbohydrates via mere extraction from the biomass or brief enzymatic saccharification, were found in significant amounts in rice straw as forms of free glucose, free fructose, sucrose, starch, and β-1,3-1,4-glucan. In this study, we investigated their amounts in rice straw (defined as culm and leaf sheath), and developed an easy method for glucose and fructose recovery from them with heat-pretreatment and subsequent 4-h enzymatic saccharification with an enzyme cocktail of cellulase and amyloglucosidase. The recovery of glucose and fructose exhibited good correlation with the amounts of soft carbohydrates. The maximum yields of glucose and fructose in the rice straw per dry weight at the heading stage and the mature stage were 43.5% in cv. Habataki and 34.1% in cv. Leafstar. Thus, rice straw with soft carbohydrates can be regarded as a novel feedstock for economically feasible production of readily-fermentable glucose and fructose for bioethanol.


Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2011

Bioethanol production from rice straw by a sequential use of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Pichia stipitis with heat inactivation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells prior to xylose fermentation.

Yuan Li; Jeung-yil Park; Riki Shiroma; Ken Tokuyasu

In order to establish an efficient bioethanol production system from rice straw, a new strategy to ferment the mixture of glucose and xylose by a sequential application of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Pichia stipitis was developed, in which heat inactivation of S. cerevisiae cells before addition of P. stipitis was employed. The results showed that heating at 50°C for 6h was sufficient to give high xylose fermentation efficiency. By application of the inactivation process, 85% of the theoretical yield was achieved in the fermentation of the synthetic medium. At the same time, the xylitol production was reduced by 42.4% of the control process. In the simultaneous saccharification and fermentation of the lime-pretreated and CO(2)-neutralized rice straw, the inactivation of S. cerevisiae cells enabled the full conversion of glucose and xylose within 80 h. Finally, 21.1g/l of ethanol was produced from 10% (w/w) of pretreated rice straw and the ethanol yield of rice straw reached 72.5% of the theoretical yield. This process is expected to be useful for the ethanol production from lignocellulosic materials in the regions where large-scale application of recombinant microorganisms was restricted.


Bioresource Technology | 2012

Ethanol production by repeated-batch simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (SSF) of alkali-treated rice straw using immobilized Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells.

Itsuki Watanabe; Naonori Miyata; Akira Ando; Riki Shiroma; Ken Tokuyasu; Toshihide Nakamura

Repeated-batch simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (SSF) of alkali-treated rice straw using immobilized yeast was developed to produce ethanol. Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells were immobilized by entrapping in photocrosslinkable resin beads, and we evaluated the possibility of its reuse and ethanol production ability. In batch SSF of 20% (w/w) rice straw, the ethanol yields based on the glucan content of the immobilized cells were slightly low (76.9% of the theoretical yield) compared to free cells (85.2% of the theoretical yield). In repeated-batch SSF of 20% (w/w) rice straw, stable ethanol production of approx. 38gL(-1) and an ethanol yield of 84.7% were obtained. The immobilizing carrier could be reused without disintegration or any negative effect on ethanol production ability.


Bioresource Technology | 2011

RT-CaCCO process: an improved CaCCO process for rice straw by its incorporation with a step of lime pretreatment at room temperature.

Riki Shiroma; Jeung-yil Park; Muhammad Imran Al-Haq; Mitsuhiro Arakane; Masakazu Ike; Ken Tokuyasu

We improved the CaCCO process for rice straw by its incorporation with a step of lime pretreatment at room temperature (RT). We firstly optimized the RT-lime pretreatment for the lignocellulosic part. When the ratio of lime/dry-biomass was 0.2 (w/w), the RT lime-pretreatment for 7-d resulted in an effect on the enzymatic saccharification of cellulose and xylan equivalent to that of the pretreatment at 120°C for 1h. Sucrose, starch and β-1,3-1,4-glucan, which could be often detected in rice straw, were mostly stable under the RT-lime pretreatment condition. Then, the pretreatment condition in the conventional CaCCO process was modified by the adaptation of the optimized RT lime-pretreatment, resulting in significantly better carbohydrate recoveries via enzymatic saccharification than those of the CaCCO process (120°C for 1 h). Thus, the improved CaCCO process (the RT-CaCCO process) could preserve/pretreat the feedstock at RT in a wet form with minimum loss of carbohydrates.


Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2010

Culm in Rice Straw as a New Source for Sugar Recovery via Enzymatic Saccharification

Jeung-yil Park; Mitsuhiro Arakane; Riki Shiroma; Masakazu Ike; Ken Tokuyasu

Rice straw was manually dissected and two main fractions were recovered: a culm and a leaf sheath/blade fraction, in order to evaluate their potential as feedstocks for the recovery of fermentable sugars. In the case of cv. Koshihikari and Milkyqueen, most soft carbohydrates (SCs: glucose, fructose, sucrose, starch, and β-1,3-1,4-glucan) were present in the culms, reaching 47.9% and 89.2% of total SCs in the two main fractions. The results also indicated that β-glucans (cellulose and β-1,3-1,4-glucan) and xylan in the culms were more susceptible to direct enzymatic attack than those in the leaf sheath/blades. Thus the culm has high potential as a new feedstock for the extraction of fermentable sugars in a concentrated form, as compared to whole rice straw and the leaf sheath/blade. In this study, a novel method of separating a culm from the whole rice straw by means of wind power was also evaluated.


Bioresource Technology | 2011

DiSC (direct saccharification of culms) process for bioethanol production from rice straw.

Jeung-yil Park; Masakazu Ike; Mitsuhiro Arakane; Riki Shiroma; Yuan Li; Yumiko Arai-Sanoh; Motohiko Kondo; Ken Tokuyasu

A simple process (the direct-saccharification-of-culms (DiSC) process) to produce ethanol from rice straw culms, accumulating significant amounts of soft carbohydrates (SCs: glucose, fructose, sucrose, starch and β-1,3-1,4-glucan) was developed. This study focused on fully mature culms of cv. Leafstar, containing 69.2% (w/w of dried culms) hexoses from SCs and cellulose. Commercially-available wind-separation equipment successfully prepared a culm-rich fraction with a SC recovery of 83.1% (w/w) from rice straw flakes (54.1% of total weight of rice straw). The fraction was suspended in water (20%, w/w) for starch liquefaction, and the suspension was subjected to a simultaneous saccharification and fermentation with yeast, yielding 5.6% (w/v) ethanol (86% of the theoretical yield from whole hexoses in the fraction) after 24h fermentation. Thus, the DiSC process produced highly-concentrated ethanol from rice straw in a one vat process without any harsh thermo-chemical pretreatments.


Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2010

Characterization of Starch Granules in Rice Culms for Application of Rice Straw as a Feedstock for Saccharification

Junko Matsuki; Jeung-yil Park; Riki Shiroma; Yumiko Arai-Sanoh; Masashi Ida; Motohiko Kondo; Kota Motobayashi; Ken Tokuyasu

Rice plants are known to accumulate starch in leaf sheaths and culms, and in some cultivars significant amounts of starch are present at the mature stage. This can be considered as potential feedstock for the recovery of fermentable sugars. We isolated starches from the culms of cultivars Yumeaoba, Koshihikari, and Leafstar to investigate their structural and physical features. Yumeaoba culm starch contained 20.2% amylose, whereas Koshihikari and Leafstar contained 25.8% and 25.2%. Yumeaoba culm starch was found by chain-length distribution analysis to contain higher amounts of short chains, resulting in lower gelatinization temperature by 7 °C, as compared to Koshihikari and Leafstar. Consequently, the rate of enzymatic hydrolysis of Yumeaoba culm starches reached maximum at a lower temperature than Leafstar. Rice culm starch, with a lower gelatinization temperature, can provide an advantageous material for feedstock for bioethanol production in terms of energy conservation.


Bioresource Technology | 2013

Integration of a phenolic-acid recovery step in the CaCCO process for efficient fermentable-sugar recovery from rice straw

Rui Zhao; Min-Soo Yun; Riki Shiroma; Masakazu Ike; Di Guan; Ken Tokuyasu

An advanced sugar-platform bioprocess for lignocellulosic feedstocks by adding a phenolic-acid (PA: p-coumaric acid and ferulic acid) recovery step to the CaCCO process was designed. For efficient PA extraction, pretreatment was 95°C for 2h, producing a yield of 7.30 g/kg-dry rice straw (65.2% of total ester-linked PAs) with insignificant effects on saccharification. PAs were readily recovered in solution during the repeated washings of solids, and the glucose yield, after 72-h saccharification of the washed solids, was significantly improved from 65.9% to 70.3-72.7%, suggesting the removal of potential enzyme inhibitors. The promotion of xylose yield was insignificant, probably due to 13.1-17.8% loss of xylose residues after washing(s). This new bioprocess, termed the SRB (simultaneous recovery of by-products)-CaCCO process, would effectively produce fermentable sugars and other valuables from feedstocks, strengthening the platform in both economic and environmental terms.


Bioresource Technology | 2013

Sequential incubation of Candida shehatae and ethanol-tolerant yeast cells for efficient ethanol production from a mixture of glucose, xylose and cellobiose.

Di Guan; Yuan Li; Riki Shiroma; Masakazu Ike; Ken Tokuyasu

A mixture of 5% (w/v) glucose, 4% (w/v) xylose and 5% (w/v) cellobiose was fermented into ethanol using non-recombinant yeasts. Two series of experiments were carried out: (1) sequential fermentation with Candida shehatae D45-6 and Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Cs-Sc), and (2) sequential fermentation with C. shehatae D45-6 and Brettanomyces bruxellensis (Cs-Bb). C. shehatae D45-6 was initially used for glucose and xylose fermentation before adding highly ethanol-tolerant yeasts, either S. cerevisiae or B. bruxellensis, for cellobiose fermentation. For the sequential fermentation using S. cerevisiae, β-glucosidase was also included in the second step. In these two experiments, ethanol concentration reached 5.6-5.8% (w/v) and 99% sugar was consumed. Our results suggest that restricted glucose production from cellulose by saccharification could allow D45-6 to complete monosaccharide fermentation before the ethanol concentration exceeded its tolerance level.

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Ken Tokuyasu

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Jeung-yil Park

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Masakazu Ike

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Mitsuhiro Arakane

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Muhammad Imran Al-Haq

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Junko Matsuki

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Yuan Li

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Motohiko Kondo

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Yumiko Arai-Sanoh

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Min-Soo Yun

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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