| Literature DB >> 20948899 |
Abstract
The enormous variety of polysaccharides that can be extracted from marine plants and animal organisms or produced by marine bacteria means that the field of marine polysaccharides is constantly evolving. Recent advances in biological techniques allow high levels of polysaccharides of interest to be produced in vitro. Biotechnology is a powerful tool to obtain polysaccharides from a variety of micro-organisms, by controlling the growth conditions in a bioreactor while tailoring the production of biologically active compounds. Following an overview of the current knowledge on marine polysaccharides, with special attention to potential pharmaceutical applications and to more recent progress on the discovering of new polysaccharides with biological appealing characteristics, this review will focus on possible strategies for chemical or physical modification aimed to tailor the final properties of interest.Entities:
Keywords: agar; alginate; carrageenans; chemical modification; chitosan; drug delivery; exopolysaccharides; gene delivery
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20948899 PMCID: PMC2953395 DOI: 10.3390/md8092435
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Polymers from macro-algae: 2003 market data [3].
| Product | Production (t y−1) | Algae Harvested (t y−1) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Carrageenan | 33,000 | 168,400 | Mainly |
| Alginate | 30,000 | 126,500 | |
| Agar | 7,630 | 55,650 | Mainly |
Figure 1The synthetic strategy for preparing alginic acid sulfated derivatives.
Figure 2The synthetic strategy for preparing chitin and chitosan sulfated derivatives [50].
Some roles of microbial exopolymeric material (EPSs) in the marine environment. Adapted from [151].
| Role of Exopolymer | Example |
|---|---|
| Assists in attachment to surfaces | Exopolymers of marine |
| Facilitates biochemical interactions between cells | Exopolymer mediated bacterial attachment to the polar end of blue-green N2-fixing alga. EPS aided attachment to symbiotic host such as vent tube worm to absorb metals and detoxify microenvironment. |
| Provides protective barrier around the cell | Bacteria in aggregates were less preferred by grazers than freely suspended bacteria. |
| Absorbs dissolved organic material | Porous and hydrated matrix acts like a sponge and sequesters and concentrates dissolved organics. |
Sugar and non sugar components of bacterial exopolysaccharides [151].
| Type | Component | Example | Mode of Linkage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pentoses | |||
| Hexoses | |||
| Amino sugars | |||
| Uronic acids | |||
| Acetic acid | |||
| Succinic acid | |||
| Pyruvic acid | Acetal | ||
| Phosphoric acid | Ester, Diester | ||
| Sulfuric acid | Ester |