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. 2012 Oct 15;134(4):2257-60.
doi: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2012.04.041. Epub 2012 Apr 17.

Polysaccharides from peach pulp: structure and effects on mouse peritoneal macrophages

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Polysaccharides from peach pulp: structure and effects on mouse peritoneal macrophages

F F Simas-Tosin et al. Food Chem. .

Abstract

Pulp from peaches contained polygalacturonic acid and arabinogalactan as main polysaccharides, which were isolated and characterised. The polygalacturonic acid (AE-CWI) contained 95% GalA and its (13)C NMR spectrum showed signals at δ 98.9, 78.0, 71.4, 69.1, 68.4, and 175.1 from C-1, C-4, C-5, C-3, C-2, and C-6 respectively, from (1→4)-linked α-GalpA units. Methylation-MS analysis of carboxy-reduced material (AE-CWI-CR) gave 90% of 2,3,6-Me(3)-galactitol acetate. The arabinogalactan (AE-AG) was composed mainly of Ara (41%) and Gal (50%) and was characterised (methylation analysis and (13)C NMR) as a type II-arabinogalactan. It induced peritoneal macrophage activation in mice, ~70% of cells treated with this fraction (1-50 μg/mL) having morphology of activated cells. However, NO production in macrophages treated with AE-AG was not affected. This suggests a new biological activity for peach polysaccharides.

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