Published October 4, 2024 | Version published
Journal article Open

Tailoring the natural rare sugars D-tagatose and L-sorbose to produce novel functional carbohydrates

  • 1. Institute of Food Science Research (CIAL-CSIC)
  • 2. ROR icon University of California, Davis
  • 3. Dairy Research Institute of Asturias (IPLA-CSIC)
  • 4. Centro de Química Orgánica "Lora Tamayo" (CSIC)
  • 5. Institute of Food Science Research, CIAL (CSIC-UAM)
  • 6. Institute of Food Science, Technology and Nutrition, ICTAN (CSIC)
  • 7. ROR icon Instituto de Productos Lácteos de Asturias
  • 8. Health Research Institute of Asturias (ISPA)
  • 9. Institute of Physical Chemistry 'Blas Cabrera' (IQF-CSIC)

Description

This multidisciplinary study details the biosynthesis of novel non-digestible oligosaccharides derived from rare sugars, achieved through transfructosylation of D-tagatose and L-sorbose by levansucrase from Bacillus subtilis CECT 39 (SacB). The characterization of these carbohydrates using NMR and molecular docking was instrumental in elucidating the catalytic mechanism and substrate preference of SacB. Tagatose-based oligosaccharides were higher in abundance than L-sorbose-based oligosaccharides, with the most representative structures being: β-D-Fru-(2→6)-β-D-Fru-(2→1)-D-Tag and β-D-Fru-(2→1)-D-Tag. In vitro studies demonstrated the resistance of tagatose-based oligosaccharides to intestinal digestion and their prebiotic properties, providing insights into their structure-function relationship. β-D-Fru-(2→1)-D-Tag was the most resistant structure to small-intestinal digestion after three hours (99.8% remained unaltered). This disaccharide and the commercial FOS clustered in similar branches, indicating comparable modulatory properties on human fecal microbiota, and exerted a higher bifidogenic effect than unmodified tagatose. The bioconversion of selected rare sugars into β-fructosylated species with a higher degree of polymerization emerges as an efficient strategy to enhance the bioavailability of these carbohydrates and promote their interaction with the gut microbiota. These findings open up new opportunities for tailoring natural rare sugars, like D-tagatose and L-sorbose, to produce novel biosynthesized carbohydrates with functional and structural properties desirable for use as emerging prebiotics and low-calorie sweeteners.

Files

s41538-024-00320-8.pdf

Files (2.1 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:edacc919e0f9454f6898a25cf78e42c3
2.1 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Funding

European Commission
TwinPrebioEnz - Twinning for intensified enzymatic processes for production of prebiotic-containing functional food and bioactive cosmetics 101060130

Dates

Available
2024-10-04
research article