| Literature DB >> 22796642 |
Supatra Karnjanapratum1, Mehdi Tabarsa, MyoungLae Cho, SangGuan You.
Abstract
Sulfated polysaccharides isolated from Capsosiphon fulvescens and fractionated using ion-exchange chromatography were investigated to determine their chemical and molecular characteristics and biological activities. The crude and fractionated polysaccharides (F(1), F(2), and F(3)) consisted mostly of carbohydrates (28.9-67.0%), uronic acids (1.6-9.2%) and sulfates (5.2-13.4%) with various amounts of proteins (2.1-53.7%). Their monosaccharide levels were significantly different including rhamnose (20.8-65.2%), xylose (13.0-37.1%) and mannose (11.6-65.1%). The polysaccharides contained one or two subfractions with molecular weights (M(w)) ranging from 401.7×10(3) to 6232×10(3) g/mol. These polysaccharides (the crude and fraction F(2)) strongly stimulated macrophage cells, RAW264.7 cell line, producing considerable amounts of NO, PGE(2) and cytokines which suggested that they could be strong immunostimulators. The main backbone of the most immunoenhancing polysaccharide (F(2)) was suggested by GC-MS and NMR to be the following: [formula, see text].Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22796642 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2012.07.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biol Macromol ISSN: 0141-8130 Impact factor: 6.953