## Measurement of the blue color of the amylose-iodine complex in aqueous solution (blue value) has been widely used to determine the amount of amylose present in a starch sample (1, 2) and has been employed in measuring changes in the amylose molecule due to hydrolysis by amylases (3). We have us
Determination of the concentrations of oligosaccharides, complex type carbohydrates, and glycoproteins using the phenol-sulfuric acid method
โ Scribed by Anat K. Saha; Curtis F. Brewer
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 676 KB
- Volume
- 254
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-6215
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โฆ Synopsis
The concentrations of methyl glycosides, oligosaccharides, glycopeptides, and glycoproteins can be accurately determined by using calibration curves composed of the appropriate monosaccharide(s) obtained with a modified version of the calorimetric phenol-sulfuric acid method. Calibration curves of pg sugar vs. 490 nm for Man, Glc, or Gal are shown to provide reliable determinations (typically * 3-4%) of corresponding methyl glycosides and linear and branched-chain oligosaccharides containing the corresponding reactive hexose residue. For complex oligosaccharides containing a known mixture of reactive hexose units, the appropriate mixture of monosaccharides are shown to provide equally accurate calibration curves for concentration determinations. In the case of the soybean agglutinin, which is a tetramer possessing one Man9 oligomannose-type chain per subunit, the protein concentration was determined from the Man calibration curve which agreed with that obtained from the molar extinction coefficient of the protein.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract A practical and convenient method for discriminating between the presence and the absence of sialic acid in carbohydrate chains of glycoproteins was devised using paramagnetic beads and two lectins, __Sambucus sieboldiana__ lectin (SSA) and __Ricinus communis__ agglutinin (RCA120). The