Glycogen is a highly branched glucose polymer functioning as a glucose buffer in animals. Multiple-detector size exclusion chromatography and fluorophore-assisted carbohydrate electrophoresis were used to examine the structure of undegraded native liver glycogen (both whole and enzymatically debranched) as a function of molecular size, isolated from the livers of healthy and db/db mice (the latter a type 2 diabetic model). Both the fully branched and debranched levels of glycogen structure showed fundamental differences between glycogen from healthy and db/db mice. Healthy glycogen had a greater population of large particles, with more R particles (tightly linked assemblages of smaller
Journal article
Molecular structural differences between Type-2-diabetic and healthy glycogen
Biomacromolecules, Vol.12(6), pp.1983-1986
2011
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Abstract
Details
- Title
- Molecular structural differences between Type-2-diabetic and healthy glycogen
- Creators
- Mitchell A SullivanJiong LiChuanzhou LiFrancisco VilaplanaDavid StapletonAngus A Gray-WealeStirling BowenLing ZhengRobert G Gilbert
- Publication Details
- Biomacromolecules, Vol.12(6), pp.1983-1986
- Identifiers
- 1595; 991012821488402368
- Academic Unit
- Southern Cross Plant Science
- Resource Type
- Journal article