Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-1997
Abstract
Capacity for information in biological molecules is traditionally thought to reside in the primary sequence of proteins and RNA, recorded in the DNA. With the exception of some RNA molecules, proteins, if not structural, carry their information in binding sites for substrates of reactions, or in binding sites for control molecules. Some proteins bind to complex carbohydrates in a carbohydrate-specific fashion, including enzymes, lectins and antibodies. These carbohydrates, assembled by sequential glycosyl transferases, also carry biological information, the other side of which is a binding protein that recognizes a specific sugar monosaccharides, sequence, anomerity, linkage, ring size, branching and substitution. It is the latter 7 parameters, however, that give carbohydrates a very large potential for information-carrying capacity in a short sequence. An exponentially growing body of knowledge exists in this aspect of carbohydrate function.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Pure and Applied Chemistry
First Page
1867
Last Page
1873
Recommended Citation
Laine, R. (1997). Information capacity of the carbohydrate code. Pure and Applied Chemistry, 69 (9), 1867-1873. https://doi.org/10.1351/pac199769091867