| Literature DB >> 24413558 |
Weihua Jin1, Wenjing Zhang2, Jing Wang3, Sumei Ren4, Ni Song4, Delin Duan5, Quanbin Zhang6.
Abstract
The crude polysaccharide (HFS) from Sargassum fusiforme (Hizikia fusiforme) was extracted using 0.1M HCl and was fractionated by anion-exchange chromatography into three fractions: HFS-1, HFS-2, and HFS-3. Based on the chemical analysis, HFS-1 was composed of laminaran, HFS-2 was a mixture of alginate and sulfated heteropolysaccharides, and HFS-3 was primarily composed of sulfated galactofucan. The NMR spectra revealed that HFS-1 was composed of a soluble laminaran with chains that are terminated by β-d-glucose residues. In contrast, the spectra obtained for HFS-2 were still complex, even after most of the alginate was removed. In addition, HFS-3 might contain 3-linked fucan sulfated at C-2, 6-linked galactan sulfated at C-2 and branched at C-4 by 2-sulfated Fuc, and galactofucan with a backbone of either alternating Gal and Fuc sulfated at C-2 or alternating (Gal)n and (Fuc)n sulfated at C-2. Moreover, HFS-3 also contained small amounts of fucoglucuronomannan and xylan.Entities:
Keywords: ESI-CID-MS/MS; Laminaran; NMR; Sargassum fusiforme; Sulfated polysaccharide
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24413558 DOI: 10.1016/j.carres.2013.12.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Carbohydr Res ISSN: 0008-6215 Impact factor: 2.104