“…The canonical enzymatic cellulose hydrolysis scheme involves cellobiohydrolases (CBH) which processively degrade cellulose chains from the ends, producing cellobiose (EC 3.2.1.91 for CBHs that proceed from the nonreducing ends of cellulose chains; there is no assigned EC number for cellobiohydrolases that release cellobiose from the reducing ends), endo--1,4-glucanases (EG; EC 3.2.1.4) which internally clip cellulose, shortening chains, and generating reactive ends for CBH, and -glucosidases (BG; EC 3.2. 1.21) which hydrolyze soluble cellodextrins to glucose, mitigating CBH product inhibition arising from cellobiose (4,10,37,38,40). Hemicellulases, ligninases, and other secreted accessory proteins, such as swollenin, increase the accessibility of cellulose to these hydrolytic cellulase activities (10,2,15,19,27,29,39).…”