Title of article :
Effect of deacetylation on the synergistic interaction of acetan with locust bean gum or konjac mannan
Author/Authors :
Cordelia Ojinnaka، نويسنده , , Geoffrey J. Brownsey، نويسنده , , Edwin R. Morris، نويسنده , , Victor J. Morris، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Abstract :
It has been discovered that deacetylation of the bacterial polysaccharide acetan promotes synergistic interactions with either locust bean gum (LBG) or konjac mannan (KM). Acetan is similar in structure to xanthan, and adopts a similar 5-fold conformation in the solid state. Like xanthan, it shows a thermally reversible order (helix)-disorder (coil) transition in solution. Both polymers have a cellulosic backbone with charged (anionic) sidechains attached at O-3 of alternate glucosyl residues, but the sidechains in acetan are longer (pentasaccharide rather than trisaccharide) and do not contain pyruvic substituents. Acetan has two sites of acetylation, one at O-6 of the inner mannosyl residue of the carbohydrate sidechains (as in xanthan) and the other on the polymer backbone (believed to be at O-6 of the branched glucosyl residues). Solutions of acetan or deacetylated acetan were equilibrated against 10 mM potassium chloride (to stabilise the ordered conformation) and were mixed (at 25 °C) with solutions of LBG or KM, also equilibrated against 10 mM potassium chloride. Unlike xanthan, native acetan showed no evidence of synergistic interaction with either LBG or KM. After deacetylation, however, large enhancements were observed in dilute-solution viscosity, and thermoreversible gels were formed at higher concentrations. With KM as co-synergist, gel melting was accompanied by an intense endotherm in differential scanning calorimetry. The magnitude of this endotherm increased with storage time at 25 °C, reaching a final value of ΔH ≈ 15.9 J/g (in comparison with ΔH ≈ 5.0 J/g for the order-disorder transition of deacetylated acetan alone). It is suggested that interaction occurs by formation of heterotypic junctions between the acetan backbone and unsubstituted regions of the plant polysaccharide, and that the acetate groups on native acetan promote solubility and hence inhibit association.
Keywords :
Acetan , Rheology , Differential scanning calorimetry , Deacetylation , Synergistic interaction
Journal title :
Carbohydrate Research
Journal title :
Carbohydrate Research