Title of article :
Extraction and Biochemical Characterization of Sulphated Glycosaminoglycans from Chicken Keel Cartilage
Author/Authors :
Khan, Humaira Majeed Lahore College for Women University, Pakistan , Ashraf, Muhammad University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences - Department of Pharmacology Toxicology, Pakistan , Hashmi, Abu Saeed University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences - Institute of Biochemistry and Biotechnology, Pakistan , Ahmad, Mansur-ud-Din University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences - Department of Epidemiology Public Health, Pakistan , Anjum, Aftab Ahmad University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences - Department of Microbiology, Pakistan
From page :
471
To page :
475
Abstract :
The present study was conducted to explore the potential and cheaper source of major and abundantly found sulphated glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) in chicken keel cartilage. Chicken is comparatively readily accessible to all the communities of Pakistan and its cartilages are the rich source of sulphated GAGs. The GAGs were extracted from prewashed and ground keel cartilages (n=3) of chicken using 3 M MgCl2, dialyzed, digested with papain, precipitated with three volumes of ethanol, and finally lyophilized to dry powder. The dry products were used for proximate analysis (carbohydrates 65.49±0.10, crude protein 12.82±0.26, ash 11.12±.56, moisture 9.88±0.32 and fat 0.69±0.14%). Dimethylmethylene blue binding (DMMB) assay was performed to determine the quantity of total GAGs in each group of product and protein contents were estimated by Bradford method. Identification of extracted samples of GAGs was performed with FTIR spectrometer using KBr disc and purity of the samples was determined by SDS-PAGE. Quantity of total GAGs in extracted samples was 70.77±2.27% and estimated amount of protein was 4.64±0.29%. FTIR spectra of standard and samples of CS showed identical and characteristic peaks in finger print region. Finger print region revealed the presence of C-O-S, S=O, -COO, -C-C, R-SO2–R, -CONH2 and R-SO2-NH2 molecules. SDS-PAGE analysis revealed the presence of 77.8 and 50.5 kDa proteins in all extracted samples of GAGs. It can be concluded that chicken keel cartilage is the potential and cheap source of GAGs. Analysis by SDS-PAGE revealed that most of the non-collagen protein can be removed by three volumes of solvent extraction and FTIR is an advance technique for identification of GAGs in mid infrared region (400-4000 cm^-1).
Keywords :
Bradford’s method , Dimethylemethylene Blue , Binding (DMMB) Assay , Fourier Transform Infrared , Spectroscopy (FTIR) , Glycosaminoglycans , (GAGs) , SDS , PAGE
Journal title :
Pakistan Veterinary Journal
Journal title :
Pakistan Veterinary Journal
Record number :
2563130
Link To Document :
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