Alcaligenes faecalis
Curdlan forms elastic gels, insoluble in cold water.
Curdlan is a microbial fermentation extracellular gum. It is a polymer prepared
commercially from a mutant strain of Alcaligenes faecalis var. myxogenes. It is relatively expensive by weight but becoming
somewhat less so.
1-3 β-D glucan
Curdlan gum is a moderate molecular mass (molecular weight) (DP ≈ 450) unbranched
linear 13 β-D
glucan (M.Wt. ≈ 100,000) with no side-chains. [Back to Top
]
Curdlan gum has junction zones consisting of parallel in-phase triple
right-handed six-fold helices (fiber repeat 18.78 Å) [503]
forming an uncharged rigid rod-like conformation. The chains are
held by intra-helix hydrogen-bonding between the 2-OH groups; each
such group hydrogen-bonding by donation to one chain and acceptance
from the other chain on the inside of the helix axis. As single-stranded curdlan forms a six-fold helix stabilized by a chain of
intramolecular hydrogen bonds between neighboring 2-OH groups, the
change from single to triple helices involves these 2-OH groups
changing their hydrogen-bonding allegiance from intramolecular to
intermolecular. [Back to Top ]
Curdlan gum is tasteless and produces a retortable freezable food elastic gels. It is insoluble in cold water, a but aqueous suspensions plasticize and briefly dissolve before producing reversible gels (that is, curdling, hence its name) on heating to around 55 °C [504]. Heating at higher temperatures produces more resilient irreversible gels, which then remain on cooling, by the aggregation of the triple-helical structures and syneresis. The 'curds' consist of mixtures of single and triple helices. Salts tend to prevent curdlan from gelling, and their presence weakens the final gels [504].
Scleroglucan (from Sclerotinia sclerotiorum) is also a
13 β-D
glucan but has additional 1
6 β-links
that confer solubility under ambient conditions but do not significantly
interfere with a triple helix gelling process similar to curdlan.
Similar polysaccharides can also be extracted from other sources
such as waste yeast.
Interactive structures are available (Jmol). [Back to Top ]
a Curdlan is soluble in dimethyl sulfoxide [1457]. [Back]
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This page was established in 20032 and last updated by Martin Chaplin on 17 September, 2018