Assessment of biochemical and immunomodulatory activity of sulphated polysaccharides from Ulva intestinalis

Journal article


Authors/Editors


Strategic Research Themes

No matching items found.


Publication Details

Author listPeasura N., Laohakunjit N., Kerdchoechuen O., Vongsawasdi P., Chao L.K.

PublisherElsevier

Publication year2016

JournalInternational Journal of Biological Macromolecules (0141-8130)

Volume number91

Start page269

End page277

Number of pages9

ISSN0141-8130

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84973495966&doi=10.1016%2fj.ijbiomac.2016.05.062&partnerID=40&md5=75d5beeecdb52a5cafa296593608686f

LanguagesEnglish-Great Britain (EN-GB)


View in Web of Science | View on publisher site | View citing articles in Web of Science


Abstract

The biochemical characteristics and immunomodulatory activity of sulphated polysaccharides isolated from Ulva intestinalis and fractionated using a silica-silica column were investigated. The unfractionated (USP) and fractionated sulphated polysaccharides (FSP4, FSP30, and FSP32) consisted mostly of carbohydrates (4.84-26.55%) and sulphates (2.85-20.42%). Structural analyses showed that USP, FSP4, FSP30 and FSP32 had molecular weights of 300, 80, 110 and 140 kDa, respectively. FSP30 exhibited the strongest DPPH. radical scavenging activity. Moreover, FSP30 showed stronger immunomodulatory activities than UPS in term of stimulating the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines, including nitric oxide (NO), tumour necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), and interleukin-1β (IL-1β), in macrophage J774A.1 cells. USP and FSP30 were not cytotoxic to mouse macrophage at the tested concentrations (6.25-50 μg/mL). The results suggested that U. intestinalis polysaccharides could be explored as potential antioxidant and immunomodulatory agents to be used as complementary medicine or functional foods. © 2016 Elsevier B.V.


Keywords

Immunomodulatory activitySilica-silica columnSulphated polysaccharide


Last updated on 2023-27-09 at 07:36