Mannopentaose comprises five D-mannose units linked via α-1,6 and α-1,2/3 glycosidic bonds, with the formula C₃₀H₅₂O₂₆, appearing as a high-purity (>85%) white powder for biochemical research. This branched oligosaccharide mimics core structures from mannans and glycoproteins, facilitating studies on mannosidases and lectin binding.
Structural Features
The structure features a central α-1,6-linked mannotetraose backbone with an additional α-D-Man branch at the 3 or 6 position of the non-reducing end mannose, as in 3α,6α-mannopentaose. This configuration distinguishes it from linear pentasaccharides like cellopentaose, enabling specific recognition by mannan-binding proteins. Physical properties include solubility in water, aiding NMR and HPLC analyses in glycobiology.
Biological and Enzymatic Roles
Mannopentaose serves as a substrate for α-mannosidases in glycoprotein processing pathways, contributing to N-glycan trimming in the endoplasmic reticulum. It interacts with fungal mannans and yeast cell wall components, influencing immune responses via mannose-binding lectins. Enzymatic hydrolysis yields mannotriose and mannobiose, supporting characterization of GH family mannosidases in biomass degradation.
Research Applications
Commercial mannopentaose enables synthesis of branched Man5 oligosaccharides for probing stereochemistry in glycosylation reactions and lectin microarrays. It aids in validating mannosidase activity, antifungal drug development targeting mannan structures, and structural biology of carbohydrate-binding domains. High-purity forms ensure accuracy in biofuel enzyme screening and glycoconjugate vaccine design.

