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      Physicochemical variation of cyanobacterial starch, the insoluble α-Glucans in cyanobacteria.

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          Abstract

          Unicellular, diazotrophic species of cyanobacteria, Cyanobacterium sp. NBRC 102756, Cyanothece sp. ATCC 51142 and Cyanobacterium sp. CLg1, accumulate insoluble α-glucan inside the cells as the storage polysaccharide. The purified polysaccharides showed granular morphology, with a diameter of 0.2-0.7 µm. The three α-glucan preparations all showed A-type allomorph in X-ray diffraction analysis. Distinct thermal gelatinization temperatures were observed for these polysaccharides. The α-glucans from NBRC 102756 and ATCC 51142 strains consisted solely of branched α-glucans, or semi-amylopectin, while CLg1 contained semi-amylopectin as the primary component as well as linear or scarcely branched glucan (amylose). Separation of the debranched glucan chains by gel filtration chromatography explicitly showed the presence in the semi-amylopectin molecule of long chains corresponding to B2 chains, which connect clusters in amylopectin of plants. The relative proportions of short and long glucan chains in the branched polysaccharides differed depending on the species, and the variation was intimately correlated with the physical properties of the α-glucans. The results suggested that semi-amylopectin of the three cyanobacteria exhibit essentially similar organization with a tandem cluster structure. The polysaccharides of these strains are therefore referred to as 'cyanobacterial starch', distinct from glycogen.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Plant Cell Physiol.
          Plant & cell physiology
          1471-9053
          0032-0781
          Apr 2013
          : 54
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Biological Production, Akita Prefectural University, Akita, 010-0195 Japan. esuzuki@akita-pu.ac.jp
          Article
          pcs190
          10.1093/pcp/pcs190
          23299410
          182cc56a-5823-4a1d-a781-7677e2477cd1
          History

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