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Normal and abnormal glycogen structure – A review

Xin Liu, Robert G. Gilbert

2024Carbohydrate Polymers15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Glycogen, a complex branched glucose polymer, is found in animals and bacteria, where it serves as an energy storage molecule. It has linear (1 → 4)-α glycosidic bonds between anhydroglucose monomer units, with branch points connected by (1 → 6)-α bonds. Individual glycogen molecules are referred to as β particles. In organs like the liver and heart, these β particles can bind into larger aggregate α particles, which exhibit a rosette-like morphology. The mechanisms and bonding underlying the aggregation process are not fully understood. For example, mammalian liver glycogen has been observed to be molecularly fragile under certain conditions, such as glycogen from diabetic livers fragmenting when exposed to dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), while glycogen from healthy livers is much less fragile; this indicates some difference, as yet unknown, in the bonding between β particles in healthy and diabetic glycogen. This fragility may have implications for blood sugar regulation, especially in pathological conditions such as diabetes.

Topics & Concepts

GlycogenMonomerChemistryDiabetes mellitusGlycosidic bondPolysaccharideGlycogen synthaseBiochemistryBiophysicsEndocrinologyInternal medicinePolymerBiologyMedicineOrganic chemistryEnzymeGlycogen Storage Diseases and MyoclonusMetabolism, Diabetes, and CancerPancreatic function and diabetes
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