Abstract

The chemical composition of fucans isolated from leach-water, an industrial alginate extraction by-product, was investigated. Several fractions were obtained by anion exchange and gel permeation chromatography. They all contained fucose, but differed in the uronic acid, sulfate, xylose and galactose contents. They distributed as a continuum between uronic acid rich and sulfate poor to sulfate rich and uronic acid poor molecules. Two highly sulfated fractions were studied in particularly by chemical means (methylation, carboxy reduction, desulfation, controlled acid hydrolysis) and by13C nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. One fraction consisted of a highly branched fucan (43.8% fucose) composed mostly of 1,2,3,4- and 1,2,4-linked fucose with some 1,4-,1,3,4- and 1,3-linkages and sulfate (23.9%) occurring on O2 and/or O3 and/or O4. The other was composed mainly of fucose (31.6%), galactose (24.7%) and sulfate (23.7%). It consisted primarily of 1,6-, 1,4,6-, 1,3- and 1,3,6-linked galactose 6-and/or 4- and/or 3-sulfate on which are linked essentially terminal fucose or 1,4-linked with sulfate on O2 and/or O3 and/or O4. None of these highly branched fractions contained sufficiently regular segments to yield series of homologous oligosaccharides on partial acid hydrolysis or interpretable13C NMR spectra.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call