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Cellulose is one of the most abundant polymers in nature.
The cellulosome is a highly elaborate cell-bound multienzyme complex that efficiently orchestrates the deconstruction of cellulose and hemicellulose, two of the nature's most abundant polymers.
Cellulose, as one of the most abundant polymers, is renewable and natural; furthermore, it has plenty of advantages such as reasonable cost, biodegradability, availability, considerable stiffness, thermal recyclability by combustion, and desired mechanical features.
Functional cellulosomes are large, multienzyme complexes designed for efficient deconstruction of cellulose and hemicellulose, the two most abundant polymers on Earth [ 14, 15].
Starch is not only one of the most abundant polymers on earth, but also one of the most complex to characterize.
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Cellulose, a complex carbohydrate that is the basic structural component of the plant cell wall, is the most abundant polymer on earth.
Endoglucanases are key enzymes in the degradation of cellulose, the most abundant polymer on Earth.
Chitin, a polymer of N- acetylglucosamine is the most abundant polymer in the ocean and the second most abundant polymer on earth, surpassed only by cellulose (Durkin et al. 2009).
Cellulose is the most abundant polymer in nature and represents 50%% of the natural biomass (Wang et al. 2012).
Lignin is nature's second most abundant polymer and displays a largely unexploited renewable resource for value-added bio-production.
Keratin protein is a tough, fibrous and the third most abundant polymer in the environment after cellulose and chitin (Lange et al. 2016).
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