Polyclonal antibodies against P-l, a pectic polysaccharide fraction extracted with 0.5m NaOH from the kernels of Prunus mume and consisted of arabino-galacturonan, and 1–3, the partial acid (0.1 m trifluoroacetic acid) hydrolysate of P-l, were prepared in Japanese white rabbits. Competitive elisa experiments strongly suggested that anti P-l and anti 1–3 antibodies were different but P–l and 1–3 cross-reacted with each other to recognize a partly similar epitope structure. The reactivities of polysaccharide fractions from the raw flesh of P. mume, and the kernels of apricot and peach extracted with either water or sodium hydroxide were examined using both antisera by the indirect competitive elisa method. The polysaccharide fractions extracted with sodium hydroxide solutions had the reactivities but not those extracted with cold and hot water. These facts suggested that the similar structure of polysaccharides to P-l was present in the flesh of P. mume and the kernels of apricot and peach. However, neither pectin of apple nor citrus had reactivity with each antiserum. P-l would be different in chemical structure from a commercially available pectin, a water-soluble polysaccharide from apple and citrus. © 1996, Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Dogasaki, C., Nishijima, M., Ohno, N., Yadomae, T., & Miyazaki, T. (1996). Immunochemical characterization of alkaline-soluble polysaccharide, P-1, from the kernels of prunus mume sieb. et zucc. Bioscience, Biotechnology and Biochemistry, 60(7), 1136–1139. https://doi.org/10.1271/bbb.60.1136
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