• Title/Summary/Keyword: Glucomannan

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Studies on Xylan of Tropical Hardwood (II) -Isolation and Purification of Xylan- (열대산(熱帶産) 광엽수재(廣葉樹材)의 Xylan에 관(關)한 연구(硏究) (II) -Xylan의 단리(單離) 및 정제(精製)-)

  • Lee, Jong Yoon
    • Journal of Korean Society of Forest Science
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    • v.35 no.1
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    • pp.24-32
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    • 1977
  • According to the chlorous salt method, most of holocellulose whose lignin was removed, was obtained. In extracting xylan from holocellulose by the different densities of alkali, 5% KOH was extracted three times but still there remained part of xylan in it and another composite of hemicellulose and cellulose was obtained. The extraction of 10% and 20% KOH showed a desirable result. Rather than the ordinary method to use a large quantity of ethanol in the precipitation isolation of xylan, the method to use a small quantity of ethanol in adopting the dialysis with cellophane-membrane by condensing density to one tenth, made il possible to extract a high purity xylan in a high retrieving rate. In isolating glucomannan, the residue of 5% KOH extraction contained a large quantity of xylan, the residue of 10% and 24% KOH extraction, also showed the same result and the comparison between glucose and mannose was approximately 1 : 1. The purification of Fehling solution made it possible to obtain comparatively pure xylan but the process of oxidation dissolution was complicated and the retrieving rate was low. This was not a good method. The ethanol titration purified a high purity xylan in a high retrieving rate and was a very excellent purifying method, considering its simple and easy process. These two purifying methods, however, could not completely remove the residue of arabinose. This will be examined and reported later.

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Effects of Phytoplant Diets on Body Weight, Feces Production, Body Fat, and Serum Lipid Levels in High-fat Diet-induced Hyperlipidemic Rats (식물성 식이조성물이 고지혈증을 유발시킨 흰쥐의 체중, 배변량, 체지방 및 혈청 지질농도에 미치는 영향)

  • Kim, Sung-Soo;Seong, Ki-Seung;Lee, Ok-Hwan;Lee, Jong Seok;Lee, Young-Tack;Kim, Sang-Hyun;Han, Chan-Kyu
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.46 no.4
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    • pp.477-482
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    • 2014
  • This study was performed to evaluate the anti-obesity and lipid-lowering effects of phytoplant diets in rats fed with a high-fat/cholesterol diet (HFCD). Experimental diet formulae contained various phytoplants such as brown rice, barley, soybean, germinated brown rice, malt, black bean, sea tangle, and/or dietary fibers including polydextrose, garcinia combogia, glucomannan, ${\small}L$-carnitine, and chitosan. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were fed with a HFCD for 6 weeks and then fed with a HFCD with/without phytoplants for another 6 weeks. Rats fed with phytoplant diets showed lower body weights, liver weights, visceral fat levels, and blood lipid levels compared to those of rats fed with HFCD alone. In addition, rats administered phytoplant diets showed increased daily feces production during the second experimental phase. These results suggest that phytoplant diets improve body weight, feces production, adipose tissue weight, and lipid metabolism.