Structural features of sulfated glycans from the tunic of Styela plicata (Chordata-Tunicata). A unique occurrence of L-galactose in sulfated polysaccharides
- PMID: 3609020
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1987.tb13534.x
Structural features of sulfated glycans from the tunic of Styela plicata (Chordata-Tunicata). A unique occurrence of L-galactose in sulfated polysaccharides
Abstract
The sulfated polysaccharides in the tunic of Styela plicata occur as three fractions that differ markedly in molecular mass and chemical composition. The high-molecular-mass fraction has a high galactose content and a strong negative optical rotation while the low-molecular-mass fractions have a higher proportion of amino sugars and glucose. The galactose occurs in these polysaccharides entirely in the L-enantiomeric form. Although L-galactose is a constituent of several polysaccharides, this is the first report of sulfated polysaccharides that contain high amounts of L-galactose, and that lack the D enantiomorph of this sugar. Furthermore, the structure of the high-molecular-mass fraction, which is composed mainly of a core of alpha-L-galactopyranose residues, sulfated at position 3, linked glycosidically though position 1----4, and with non-sulfated L-galactopyranose non-reducing end-units, is unique among other previously described sulfated glycans. These data are of considerable interest as they show an unusual example of possible variants of polyanionic glycans with structure function in living tissues.
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