Abstract

Water-soluble polysaccharides isolated from the roots of Panax ginseng C. A. Meyer were completely fractionated into two neutral fractions (WGPN and WGPA-N) and six acidic fractions (WGPA-1-RG, WGPA-2-RG, WGPA-1-HG, WGPA-2-HG, WGPA-3-HG and WGPA-4-HG) by a combination of ethanol precipitation, ion-exchange and gel permeation chromatographies. The analytical results showed that WGPN was a starch-like glucan; WGPA-N was a mixture of starch-like glucan and arabinogalactan; WGPA-1-RG and WGPA-2-RG were composed of major neutral sugars and minor acidic sugars that belong to the type-I rhamnogalacturonan (RG-I)-rich pectins, while fractions WGPA-1-HG to WGPA-4-HG were mainly composed of galacturonic acid (GalA, 62.4–92.1%) and have been identified to be homogalacturonan (HG)-rich pectins with different degrees of methyl-esterification, ranging from 0% to 30%. High performance gel permeation chromatography (HPGPC) showed that the six acidic fractions were homogenous, with molecular weights approximately ranging from 3.5 × 10 3 to 1.1 × 10 5. Lymphocyte proliferation assays showed that both the neutral polysaccharides and acidic polysaccharides were potent B and T cell stimulators.

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