| Literature DB >> 32241425 |
Qinghua Liu1, Zuobin Zhu2, Mengmeng Wang3, Yuechen Wang2, Peng Zhang4, Hao Wang5, Mengyu Liang5, Ying Li6, Bin Deng7, Daoquan Tang3, Robert G Gilbert8, Liang Wang9.
Abstract
Glycogen, a glucose homopolymer with many glucose chains, is the primary blood-sugar reservoir in many organisms. It comprises β particles (∼20 nm) which can bind together to form large α particles with a rosette morphology. When dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) is added to glycogen from diabetic livers, α particles break apart to β particles ('fragility'), possibly due to H-bond disruption; this is not seen in healthy livers. Glycogen α and β particles, and α-particle fragility, are observed in mammals and bacteria, and are examined here in the worm Caenorhabditis elegans, with glycogen from two C. elegans strains, cultured in normal and high-glucose conditions. There were mainly β particles, with some large α particles. Most particles were fragile in DMSO. Growing in a high-glucose medium results in more long chains and more fragility, consistent with previous observations in diabetic animal models. Why high glucose levels facilitate fragility is worthy of further investigation.Entities:
Keywords: C. elegans; Chain length distribution; Fragility; Glycogen; Molecular structure
Year: 2020 PMID: 32241425 DOI: 10.1016/j.carbpol.2020.116181
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Carbohydr Polym ISSN: 0144-8617 Impact factor: 9.381