Abstract

Glycosyl composition and linkage analyses are important first steps toward understanding the structural diversity and biological importance of polysaccharides. Failure to fully solubilize samples prior to analysis results in the generation of incomplete and poor-quality composition and linkage data by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). Acidic polysaccharides also do not give accurate linkage results, because they are poorly soluble in DMSO and tend to undergo β-elimination during permethylation. Ionic liquids can solubilize polysaccharides, improving their derivatization and extraction for analysis. We show that water-insoluble polysaccharides become much more amenable to chemical analysis by first acetylating them in an ionic liquid. Once acetylated, these polysaccharides, having been deprived of their intermolecular hydrogen bonds, are hydrolyzed more readily for glycosyl composition analysis or methylated more efficiently for glycosyl linkage analysis. Acetylation in an ionic liquid greatly improves composition analysis of insoluble polysaccharides when compared to analysis without acetylation, enabling complete composition determination of normally recalcitrant polysaccharides. We also present a protocol for uronic acid linkage analysis that incorporates this preacetylation step. This protocol produces partially methylated alditol acetate derivatives in high yield with minimal β-elimination and gives sensitive linkage results for acidic polysaccharides that more accurately reflect the structures being analyzed. We use important plant polysaccharides to show that the preacetylation step leads to superior results compared to traditional methodologies.

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