Topic:Monosaccharides
Monosaccharides are simple sugars that serve as the fundamental building blocks of carbohydrates and play a significant role in equine nutrition and metabolism. In horses, common monosaccharides include glucose, fructose, and galactose. These sugars are absorbed in the small intestine and are essential for providing energy to support various physiological functions and activities. Monosaccharides are involved in numerous metabolic pathways, influencing energy production, glycogen storage, and overall health. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the absorption, metabolism, and impact of monosaccharides on equine health and performance.
Role of oligosaccharides in the pharmacokinetics of tissue-derived and genetically engineered cholinesterases. To understand the role of glycosylation in the circulation of cholinesterases, we compared the mean residence time of five tissue-derived and two recombinant cholinesterases (injected intravenously in mice) with their oligosaccharide profiles. Monosaccharide composition analysis revealed differences in the total carbohydrate, galactose, and sialic acid contents. The molar ratio of sialic acid to galactose residues on tetrameric human serum butyrylcholinesterase, recombinant human butyrylcholinesterase, and recombinant mouse acetylcholinesterase was found to be approximately 1.0. For Torpedo ca...
Structure of glycan moieties responsible for the extended circulatory life time of fetal bovine serum acetylcholinesterase and equine serum butyrylcholinesterase. Cholinesterases are serine hydrolases that can potentially be used as pretreatment drugs for organophosphate toxicity, as drugs to alleviate succinylcholine-induced apnea, and as detoxification agents for environmental toxins such as heroin and cocaine. The successful application of serum-derived cholinesterases as bioscavengers stems from their relatively long residence time in the circulation. To better understand the relationship between carbohydrate structure and the stability of cholinesterases in circulation, we determined the monosaccharide composition, the distribution of various oligo...
Glycosylated equine prolactin and its carbohydrate moiety. Glycosylated equine prolactin (G-ePRL) and nonglycosylated ePRL were purified to homogeneity from side fractions obtained during isolation of LH/FSH from horse pituitaries. Both PRL forms were isolated together in high yield by the isolation procedure used for glycosylated porcine PRL/(G-pPRL) and pPRL, involving acetone extraction/precipitation, NaCl and isoelectric precipitation, and gel filtration. Purification of G-ePRL required additional Con A chromatography. The N-terminal amino acid sequencing for 32 cycles of G-ePRL and ePRL resulted in sequences identical to the known primary structu...