κ- and ι-carrageenan that were partially hydrolyzed in dilute
acid while being in the ordered
conformation (induced by LiI or LiCl, respectively) gave rise to
bimodal molecular weight distributions
(MWDs) as shown by size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) and gel
filtration. Optical rotation measurements showed that the high molecular weight (MW) fraction remained
conformationally ordered, whereas
the low-MW fraction was in the disordered state. The relative
amount of the low-MW fraction increased
with degradation time. By inducing the disordered conformation (in
0.01 M LiCl) the weight average
molecular weight (M
w) of the partially
hydrolyzed samples decreased 1.5−3 times. These results
are
interpreted in favor of a double-stranded ordered conformation.
Partial hydrolysis of this structure yields
a metastable, partially double-stranded structure containing chain
breaks that are “unexposed” due to
partial overlap of the individual chain fragments. When the degree
of polymerization (DP) of such
fragments decrease below the critical value (DPc) for
duplex stabilization the fragments are released and
appear as a separate low-MW fraction in the SEC chromatograms.
DPc was estimated to be approximately
100 residues in both cases. After induction of the disordered
conformation in partially hydrolyzed samples
the molecular weight distribution remained bimodal. For
κ-carrageenan this is attributed to the higher
rate of hydrolysis in the disordered fragments than in the parent
ordered chains, which also leads to a
rapid accumulation of dialyzable oligomers (DP 1−4). For
ι-carrageenan, where the rate of hydrolysis
ideally is independent of the conformational state, the bimodality is
tentatively attributed to the presence
of κ-units (partially formed by desulfation), which are hydrolyzed
more rapidly in the disordered state
than in the ordered state.
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