| Literature DB >> 17483161 |
Trushar R Patel1, Stephen E Harding, Anna Ebringerova, Marcin Deszczynski, Zdenka Hromadkova, Adiaratou Togola, Berit Smestad Paulsen, Gordon A Morris, Arthur J Rowe.
Abstract
The physiological importance of weak interactions between biological macromolecules (molar dissociation constants >10 microM) is now well recognized, particularly with regard to cell adhesion and immunological phenomena, and many weak interactions have been measured for proteins. The concomitant importance of carbohydrate-carbohydrate interactions has also been identified, although no weak interaction between pure carbohydrate systems has ever been measured. We now demonstrate for the first time to our knowledge using a powerful probe for weak interactions--sedimentation velocity in the analytical ultracentrifuge--that at least some carbohydrates (from the class of polysaccharides known as heteroxylans and demonstrated here to be biologically active) can show well-defined weak self-interactions of the "monomer-dimer" type frequently found in protein systems. The weak interaction between the heteroxylans is shown from a temperature dependence study to be likely to be hydrophobic in nature.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17483161 PMCID: PMC1913144 DOI: 10.1529/biophysj.106.100891
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biophys J ISSN: 0006-3495 Impact factor: 4.033