TY - JOUR
T1 - Critical review of the criterion of polysaccharide purity
AU - Zhang, Xueting
AU - Li, Lifeng
AU - Fung, Hauyee
AU - Chen, Niping
AU - Shan, Pengfei
AU - Zhou, Yifa
AU - Han, Quanbin
N1 - This work was funded and supported by HKSAR Innovation and Technology Fund (ITF), Tier 3, ITS/311/09, General Research Fund (12100615, 22100014, 12100818, 12101322, 12101123), UGC Research Matching Grant Scheme (2019-1-10, 2019-1-14, 2019-2-06), Health Medical Research Fund (11122531, 14150521, 17182681), National Natural Sciences Foundation in China (81473341, 82173948, 82204747), the Science and Technology Project of Shenzhen (JCYJ20160531193812867), the Key-Area Research and Development Program of Guangdong Province (2020B1111110007), Hong Kong Baptist University (RC-Start-up Grants, MPCF-001-2016/2017, RC- IRMS/14-15/06, FRG2/17-18/060 and FRG2/16-17/002), and Vincent & Lily Woo Foundation.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
PY - 2025/3/15
Y1 - 2025/3/15
N2 - Natural polysaccharides attract scientists and industries' interest with diverse applications in biomaterials, immune regulation, gut microbiota regulation, food additives, and more. Nevertheless, the absence of standardized purity criteria created significant challenges in characterizing polysaccharides, leading to varied and complicated structures, and impeding progress in research and development. Consequently, it is essential to obtain samples that adhere to high-level and unified purity standards for effective polysaccharide research. Herein we review current methods for assessing polysaccharide purity, emphasizing a commonly neglected impurity: mixtures of polysaccharides with similar molecular sizes. Such a mixture, previously regarded as a single sample, can present a much more complex and ambiguous chemical structure. To address this challenge, we propose enhancing the purity criteria to identify these mixtures. Briefly, the molecular size changes are monitored following hydrolysis with diagnostic enzymes which are identified through methylation and monosaccharide analysis. A pure polymer will exhibit a complete shift in its HPGPC peak, while a polymer mixture will display residual peaks. Establishing standardized criteria for assessing polysaccharide quality represents a significant milestone in the industrialization of these important biomolecules. By enabling accurate, consistent, reliable characterization, this advancement lays the groundwork for broader polysaccharide applications in pharmaceuticals, food, materials, and beyond.
AB - Natural polysaccharides attract scientists and industries' interest with diverse applications in biomaterials, immune regulation, gut microbiota regulation, food additives, and more. Nevertheless, the absence of standardized purity criteria created significant challenges in characterizing polysaccharides, leading to varied and complicated structures, and impeding progress in research and development. Consequently, it is essential to obtain samples that adhere to high-level and unified purity standards for effective polysaccharide research. Herein we review current methods for assessing polysaccharide purity, emphasizing a commonly neglected impurity: mixtures of polysaccharides with similar molecular sizes. Such a mixture, previously regarded as a single sample, can present a much more complex and ambiguous chemical structure. To address this challenge, we propose enhancing the purity criteria to identify these mixtures. Briefly, the molecular size changes are monitored following hydrolysis with diagnostic enzymes which are identified through methylation and monosaccharide analysis. A pure polymer will exhibit a complete shift in its HPGPC peak, while a polymer mixture will display residual peaks. Establishing standardized criteria for assessing polysaccharide quality represents a significant milestone in the industrialization of these important biomolecules. By enabling accurate, consistent, reliable characterization, this advancement lays the groundwork for broader polysaccharide applications in pharmaceuticals, food, materials, and beyond.
KW - Diagnostic enzyme
KW - Molecular size
KW - Natural polysaccharides
KW - Purity criteria
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85213893738&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0144861724014139?via%3Dihub
U2 - 10.1016/j.carbpol.2024.123187
DO - 10.1016/j.carbpol.2024.123187
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85213893738
SN - 0144-8617
VL - 352
JO - Carbohydrate Polymers
JF - Carbohydrate Polymers
M1 - 123187
ER -