## Abstract A Structure determination of the naturally occuring marine algal polysaccharide poly‐β‐D‐mannuronic acid is described. The structure consists of 1e → 4e linked D‐mannuronic acid chains with the monosaccharide units in the C1 chair conformation. The X‐ray fiber diffraction photograph obt
Structural components of alginic acid. II. The crystalline structure of poly-α-L-guluronic acid. Results of X-ray diffraction and polarized infrared studies
✍ Scribed by E. D. T. Atkins; I. A. Nieduszynski; W. Mackie; K. D. Parker; E. E. Smolko
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1973
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 516 KB
- Volume
- 12
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-3525
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
A structural investigation of the marine algal polysaccharide poly‐α‐L‐guluronic acid is described. The molecular chains consist of 1 → 4 diaxially linked L‐guluronic acid residues in the 1C chair conformation and are stabilized in a twofold helix conformation by an intra‐molecular O(2)H … O(6)D hydrogen‐bond. The X‐ray fiber diffraction photograph has been indexed to an orthorhombic unit cell in which a = 8.6 Å, b (fiber axis) = 8.7 Å, c = 10.7 Å.
A structure corresponding to the space group P2~1~2~1~2~1~ is proposed, in which all intermolecular hydrogen bonds interact with water molecules and in which all oxygen atoms except for the inaccessible bridge oxygens are involed. The relationship between the shape and structure of the polyguluronic acid molecule and its biological function is discussed.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES