| Literature DB >> 31466265 |
Yan Ren1, Yueping Bai2, Zhidan Zhang3, Wenlong Cai4, Antonio Del Rio Flores4.
Abstract
Polysaccharides are ubiquitous biomolecules found in nature that contain various biological and pharmacological activities that are employed in functional foods and therapeutic agents. Natural polysaccharides are obtained mainly by extraction and purification, which may serve as reliable procedures to enhance the quality and the yield of polysaccharide products. Moreover, structural analysis of polysaccharides proves to be promising and crucial for elucidating structure-activity relationships. Therefore, this report summarizes the recent developments and applications in extraction, separation, purification, and structural analysis of polysaccharides of plants and fungi.Entities:
Keywords: extraction; isolation; natural polysaccharides; plants and fungi; purification; structure analysis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31466265 PMCID: PMC6749352 DOI: 10.3390/molecules24173122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Structures of animal and plant polysaccharides (Left: chitosan; right: cellulose).
Figure 2Literature analysis of natural polysaccharide extractions and polysaccharide synthesis with the statistical data coming from the web of science.
Figure 3Strategic map for selection of natural polysaccharide extraction methods.
Summary of methods of purification of polysaccharides from natural sources.
| Method | Mechanism | Range of Application | Target Production Properties | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fractional precipitation | The solubilities of polysaccharides are different in different solvents. | crude polysaccharides with different molecular weight distribution | obtain polysaccharides of different molecular weights | ① simplicity of process | ① easy to produce co-precipitation |
| Cetyltrimethylammonium ammonium bromide (CTAB) precipitation | Long chain quaternary ammonium salt can form complex with acidic polysaccharides or long chain polysaccharides and then precipitate. | most crude polysaccharides, especially the acidic polysaccharides. | obtain acidic and neutral crude polysaccharides | ① low cost | ① the great destruction of structures of polysaccharides |
| Metal complexation | Polysaccharides can be complexed with specific ionic compounds to precipitate. | most crude polysaccharides | obtain free polysaccharides of different properties | ① simplicity of operator | uneasy to control the degree of reaction leading to the irreversible changes of structures of polysaccharides |
| Anion-exchange chromatography | It is the same as ion-exchange with reversible adsorption and bond adsorption. | acidic, neutral, and viscous polysaccharides, especially complex polysaccharides that bind to proteins | obtain homogenous polysaccharides | having a large separation capacity and satisfactory effects | ① high cost |
| Gel column chromatography | molecular sieve principle, according to the size and shape of polysaccharides | most crude polysaccharides | obtain homogenous polysaccharides from different molecular weight ranges | quick, convenient, and effective separation process | ① strict conditions for separation |
| Affinity column chromatography | molecular affinity | polysaccharides with affinity to groups on chromatographic columns | obtain homogenous polysaccharides with different | ① can separate polysaccharides with less content. | difficult to find suitable ligands |
| Cellulose column chromatography | molecular sieve principle | acidic and neutral polysaccharides | to obtain polysaccharides from different molecular weight ranges | polysaccharides with high purity | time-consuming, especially for the more viscous acid polysaccharides |
| Macroporous resin chromatography | molecular sieve and selective adsorption principle | most polysaccharides | to obtain polysaccharides from different molecular weight ranges | ① high adsorption capacity | the ability to separate polysaccharides with different properties is weak |
Figure 4Schematic diagram of ion exchange and gel column chromatography.
Summary of chromatography application in natural polysaccharides.
| Order | Chromatography | Column Type | Elution Condition | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Uniformity and molecular weight determination | ||||
| 1 | HPGPC | Shodex sugar KS-805+ guard column KS-G (300 × 7.8 mm) | unknown | [ |
| 2 | HPGPC | TSK-gel column G4000PWXL | ultra-pure water containing 0.1% ( | [ |
| 3 | HPLC | TSK G4000PWXL (300 × 7.8 mm) | deionized water, 0.6 mL/min | [ |
| 4 | HPLC | TSK-gel G4000PWXL (300 × 7.8 mm) | 0.003 mol/L CH3COONa solution, 0.8 mL/min | [ |
| 5 | HPSEC | TSK-gel G4000 PWXL (300 × 7.8 mm) | distilled water, 0.6 mL/min | [ |
| Monosaccharide composition analysis | ||||
| 1 | GC | HP-5 fused silica capillary column (30 m × 0.32 mm × 0.25 mm) | N2 carrier gas, 1.0 mL/min. | [ |
| 2 | HPLC | Waters xbridge-C18 column | 0.1 mol/L potassium phosphate buffer, 1.0 mL/min | [ |
| 3 | HPAEC | CarbopacTM PA-20 column (4 mm × 250 mm) | unknown | [ |
| 4 | HPGPC | L-aquagel-OH 40 pre-column (300 × 7.5 mm) | NaAc solution (0.003 mol/L), 1.0 mL/min | [ |
| 5 | GC-MS | polycarborane–siloxane capillary column (25 m × 0.22 mm i.d. ×0.1 µm film thickness) | Helium carrier gas, 1 mL/min | [ |
| Polysaccharide separation and purification | ||||
| 1 | Anion exchange column chromatography and gel column chromatography | DEAE-Cellulose A52 (2.6 × 30 cm) | NaCl aqueous solution (0–1 mol/L)/Deionized water, 9 mL/h | [ |
| 2 | Anion exchange column chromatography and gel column chromatography | anion-exchange chromatography column (2.6 × 37 cm) | NaCl (0–0.6 mol/L), 4 mL/min | [ |
| 3 | Anion exchange column chromatography and gel column chromatography | DEAE-52 cellulose gel (2.5 × 60 cm) | NaCl (0–0.3 mol/L) | [ |
| 4 | Gel column chromatography | DEAE-52 cellulose chromatography column (1.6 × 60 cm) | NaCl (0–0.3 mol/L), 0.64 mL/min | [ |
Abbreviations: HPGPC, high-performance gel permeation chromatography; HPSEC, high-performance exclusion chromatography; HPAEC, high-performance anion exchange chromatography.
Summary of monosaccharides composition, molecular weight, main structure, biological activity, and reference list of natural polysaccharide in recent five years.
| Name | Material Source | Monosaccharide Composition and Proportion | Molecular Weight | The Main Structure | Biological Activities | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AAPS-1 | Glc, Gal, Ara in a ratio of 1.6:5.1:1.0 | 23.2 kDa | →6)-α- | anti-oxidation | [ | |
| PRG |
| unknown | 5.16 kDa | β- | neuroprotection | [ |
| EGSP | unknown | 1913 kDa | β-1,4- | unknown | [ | |
| CSPS-1 |
| Glc, Gal, Xyl, Man, Rha in the ratio of 30.67:13.37:5.40:2.39:1.0 | 11,700 kDa | (1→6)-linked α- | antitumor | [ |
| GP90-1B | Glc, Ara in a molar ratio of 9.92:84.06 | unknown | (1→5)-linked-α- | anti-oxidation | [ | |
| LRLP4-A | unknown | 135 kDa | 1→6-linked β-galactopyranosyl residues substituted at | immunomodulatory | [ | |
| GP70-2 | D-Gla, L-Ara in a molar ratio of 1:1 | 74 kDa | (1→3) linked α- | anti-oxidation | [ | |
| ZCMP |
| GalA, Api, Gal, Rha, Ara, Xyl, Man in a molar ratio of 51.4:15.5:6.0:11.8:4.2:4.4:4.2 | 77.2 kDa | 70% AGA (α-1,4- | anti-angiogenesis, immune regulation | [ |
| IPSII |
| Glc, Gal, and Rha | 15.934 kDa | a β-type heteropolysaccharide with a pyran group | anti-oxidation | [ |
| CPTC-2 | Glc, Man, Xyl, Ara, Rha, Gal in a molar ratio of 1.00:0.32:0.27:3.34:1.22:1.84 | 73.53 kDa | α-(1→3) Araf, α-(1→5) Araf and α-(1→4) Galp with branches composed of α-(1→3,5) Araf and β-(1→3,6) Manp | antitumor | [ | |
| GFP | Rha, Xyl, Man, Glc in a molar ratio of 1.00:1.04:1.11:6.21 | 155 kDa | every→3)-Glcp-(1→and one→3,4)-Glcp-(1→connected interval with a small amount of 1→, 1→4,1→6 glycosidic linkage | immunomodulatory | [ | |
| TC-DHPA4 | tissue-cultured | Rha, Ara, Man, Glc, Gal, GlcA in a molar ratio of 1.28:1:1.67:4.71:10.43:1.42 | 800 kDa | →6)-β-Galp-(1→6)-β-Galp-(1→4)-β-GlcpA-(1→6)-β-Glcp-(1→6)-β-Glcp-(→ | unknown | [ |
|
|
| D-Mannose, D-Glccose, D-Galactose, D-Xylose, L-Fucose, L-Arabinose and L-Rhamnose | 16 kDa | 1-3 linked linear glucose backbone | unknown | [ |
| HM41 | aerial part of | Rha, Ara, Xyl, Man, Gal, Glc in a molar ratio of 1.0:5.5:1.8:3.0:9.4:21 | 11.7 kDa | β-(1→4) Gal, β-(1→4) Glc and b-(1→6)Glc.β-(1→4)Gal | anti-oxidation | [ |
| ACP1-1 | Man, Glc, Gal in a molar ratio of 1.08:4.65:1.75 | 46.78 kDa | (1→3,6)-galacturonopyranosyl residues interspersed with (1→4)-residues and (1→3)-mannopyranosyl | unknown | [ | |
| GalM | unknown | 1420 kDa | β-1,4- | antitumor | [ | |
| LPR | Glc, Man in a molar ratio of 2.9:3.3 | 51.2 kDa | beta-(1→4)-linked D-glucopyranosyl and beta-(1→4)-linked D-mannopyanosyl | anti-oxidation | [ | |
| EPS | a newly isolated psychrophilic Antarcticfungus | unknown | unknown | (1→3)-linked β- | antitumor | [ |
| ASPP | purple sweet potato | Rha, Ara, Xyl, Man, Glc in the molar ratio of 2.8:1.9:1.0:7.6:53.3 | 18 kDa | 1,4-linked Glcp with side chains attached to the O-6 position | anti-inflammatory | [ |
| CP-III | Gal, Ara, GalA, Rha, Glc, Xyl and Man in a molar ratio of 31.1:27.5:22.0:6.7:5.8:3.8:3.1 | 72.7 kDa | →4)GalAp(α1→ and →2)Rhap(α1→4)GalAp(α1→ | pectin like polysaccharides | [ | |
| RCNP | Ara, Gal in a molar ratio of nearly 3:1 | 11.4 kDa | arabinan region: (1→5)-linked Araf residues with side chains branched at the O-3 position, arabino galactan region: (1→4)-, (1→6)- or (1→3)-linked Galp along with small amounts of branches at the O-3 position of the (1→6)-linked Galp or O-6 position of the (1→3)-linked Galp residues | immunomodulatory activity | [ | |
| EPS-2 | Saffron | unkown | 40.4 kDa | (1→2)-linked - | protection of cochlear hair cells from ototoxicity exposure | [ |
Abbreviations: Ara, arabinose; Xyl, xylose; Man, mannose; Glc, glucose; Gal, galactose; Fuc, fucose; Fru, fructose; Rha, rhamnose; Sor, sorbose; Tal, talose; GlcA, glucuronic acid; GalA, galacturonic acid; Galp, galactopyranose; Glcp, glucopyranose.
Raman spectrum of polysaccharide functional groups.
| Raman Spectrum/cm−1 | Group/Atom |
|---|---|
| 350–600 | Pyranose ring |
| 600–950 | Heterocarbon model |
| 950–1200 | Glycosidic bond type |
| 1200–1500 | CH2 and C-OH deformation |
Figure 5Analysis of the primary structure of polysaccharides (icon Table 5).
Common methods for determination of polysaccharide primary structure.
| Number | Polysaccharide Structure Analysis and Determination Project | Common Method |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Overall structural analysis | High performance gel permeation chromatography (HPGPC), osmotic pressure, light scattering, viscosity, polypropylene gel electrophoresis, etc. |
| 2 | Overall structural analysis | Complete acid hydrolysis, HPLC, GC, GC-MS, high performance ion chromatography, etc. |
| 3 | Glycoside ring form | Raman spectroscopy such as infrared spectroscopy. |
| 4 | Glycosidic linkage sequence | Selective acid hydrolysis, sequential hydrolysis of glycosidase, nuclear magnetic resonance, etc. |
| 5 | Hydroxyl substitution | Methylation, periodate oxidation, Smith degradation, GC-MS, nuclear magnetic resonance, etc. |
| 6 | Polysaccharides chain-peptide bond linkage | Dilute alkali hydrolysis, hydrazine reaction, amino acid composition reaction, etc. |
| 7 | Amorphic form substituted by glycosides | Glycosidase hydrolysis, nuclear magnetic resonance, infrared chromatography, laser, etc. |
| 8 | Monosaccharide residue type and glycosidic linkage site | Methylation analysis, GC-MS, etc. |
| 9 | Oligosaccharide determination | Partial acid hydrolysis, GC-MS, MS, etc. |
Figure 6Photomicrographs of polysaccharides as recorded by SEM (these three polysaccharides came from the bamboo shoot shell of Pleioblastus amarus extraction in our laboratory).