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Appl Environ Microbiol. 1981 May; 41(5): 1112-1116

Polyguaiacol: a Useful Model Polymer for Lignin Biodegradation Research

R. L. Crawford, L. E. Robinson and R. D. Foster

University of Minnesota Gray Freshwater Biological Institute and Department of Microbiology, Navarre, Minnesota 55392

ABSTRACT

A polymer of ring-labeled [14C]o-methoxyphenol ([14C]guaiacol) was prepared by peroxidase-H2O2-catalyzed oxidation of the 14C-labeled monomeric compound. The ring-labeled [14C]polyguaiacol contained 67.71% carbon, 5.09% hydrogen, 27.49% oxygen, 25.44% methoxyl, and 8.60% phenolic hydroxyl. The polymer had an average molecular weight of between 5,000 and 15,000, as determined by gel chromatography. A schematic representation of the polymer, similar to previously published structures of polyguaiacols, was devised to meet these and other analytical parameters. The polymer is primarily composed of o-o and p-p-linked guaiacol moieties, with an occasional o-p-biphenyl link and some p-diphenoquinone structures. An approximate molecular formula is [C49O14H31]n, where n 5.8. Its C6 formula is C6H2.3O0.3carbonyl (OH)0.7(OCH3)1.0. Polyguaiacol has many of the characteristics of a synthetic lignin. It is easier and less expensive to prepare than standard synthetic lignins (dehydrogenation polymers of coniferyl alcohol). It is degraded ([14C]polyguaiacol -> 14CO2) by the lignolytic system of the white-rot fungus Phanaerochaete chrysosporium. It is suggested that [14C]polyguaiacol may be of value as a substrate for lignin biodegradation research.


Appl Environ Microbiol. 1981 May; 41(5): 1112-1116







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