Abstract

Pea hulls contained 925 mg/g sugar including 659 mg/g cellulosic glucose and 90 mg/g uronic acid. They were de-esterified by NaOH (pH>13 at 4°C, 2 h) and treated with HCl (0.1 mol/l, 80°C, 24 h). The HCl-soluble fraction represented 95 mg/g initial pea hulls. It was rich in galacturonic acid (259 mg/g), xylose (93 mg/g) and rhamnose (91 mg/g), which co-eluted in anion-exchange chromatography. The HCl-soluble fraction was degraded by a rhamnogalacturonan-hydrolase and the reaction products were fractionated by size-exclusion chromatography. Two fractions, representing together 18 mg/g initial pea hulls, were composed almost exclusively of galacturonic acid and xylose and could be defined as xylogalacturonans. The first fraction exhibited a high molar mass, a molar ratio Xyl/GalA of 1 and contained almost 5% of rhamnose. The molar mass of the second fraction was much lower and the molar ratio Xyl/GalA was 0.6. Methylation analysis showed the presence in both fractions of a α(1→4) galacturonan backbone highly substituted on O-3 either by terminal xylosyl residues or by short side-chains of (1→2) linked xylosyl residues.

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