著者
Eri Kokubo Hirofumi Sonoki Kenta Aizawa Hiroki Takagi Masayasu Takada Ayako Ito Yuki Nakazato Yasuhiro Takeda Kazuhiro Miyaji
出版者
The Japanese Society of Applied Glycoscience
雑誌
Journal of Applied Glycoscience (ISSN:13447882)
巻号頁・発行日
pp.jag.JAG-2021_0013, (Released:2022-04-19)

Slowly digestible carbohydrates are needed for nutritional support in diabetic patients with malnutrition. They are a good source of energy and have the advantage that their consumption produces a low postprandial peak in blood glucose levels because they are slowly and completely digested in the small intestine. A high-amount isomaltomegalosaccharide containing carbohydrate (H-IMS), made from starch by dextrin dextranase, is a mixture of glucose polymers which has a continuous linear structure of α-1,6-glucosidic bonds and a small number of α-1,4-glucosidic bonds at the reducing ends. It has a broad degree of polymerization (DP) distribution with glucans of DP 10-30 as the major component. In our previous study, H-IMS has been shown to exhibit slow digestibility in vitro and not to raise postprandial blood glucose to such levels as that raised by dextrin in vivo. This marks it out as a potentially useful slowly digestible carbohydrate, and this study aimed to evaluate its in vivo digestibility. The amount of breath hydrogen emitted following oral administration of H-IMS was measured to determine whether any indigestible fraction passed through to and was fermented in the large intestine. Total carbohydrate in the feces was also measured. H-IMS, like glucose and dextrin, did not result in breath hydrogen excretion. Carbohydrate excretion with dietary H-IMS was no different from that of glucose or water. These results show that the H-IMS is completely digested and absorbed in the small intestine, indicating its potential as a slowly digestible carbohydrate in the diet of diabetic patients.
著者
Norihisa Hamaguchi Hirokazu Hirai Kenta Aizawa Masayasu Takada
出版者
日本応用糖質科学会
雑誌
Journal of Applied Glycoscience (ISSN:13447882)
巻号頁・発行日
pp.jag.JAG-2014_009, (Released:2014-12-09)
被引用文献数
1 17

Water-soluble dietary fiber provides numerous health benefits. A novel procedure to efficiently manufacture water-soluble indigestible polysaccharides was developed by heating glucose at 180°C in the presence of activated carbon. Aside from its ability to catalytically assist the polycondensation of saccharides, activated carbon provides the added benefits of being easily separable from the reactants and suppressing coloration of the product. Prior to purification, the indigestible fraction made up over 80% of the reaction mixture. After hydrolysis catalyzed by α-amylase and glucoamylase, and fractionation by ion-exchange chromatography, a total of 99.7% dietary fiber content was attained. This indigestible fraction, termed resistant glucan, was only minimally degraded by upper digestive tract enzymes, similar to the digestibility of polydextrose. Structural analysis by methylation and NMR indicated that the resistant glucan formed a highly branched structure containing α- and β-1,2-, 1,3-, 1,4-, and 1,6-linkages. On an industrial scale, the resistant glucan was obtained from glucose syrup (DE 86) by heating with activated carbon, enzymatic hydrolysis, refining, fractionating, and drying. Our facile method is an efficient means to obtain water-soluble dietary fiber.