This bacterium does not use glucose or fructose as its carbon sources, but instead uses rhamnose and betaine.
12.
For instance, besides glucose, sugar monomers in hemicellulose can include xylose, mannose, galactose, rhamnose, and arabinose.
13.
Through acid hydrolysis, the rhamnose and glucose sugar moieties are removed from hesperidin, which breaks the interaction between hesperidin and pectin.
14.
RhlC catalyses the addition of the second rhamnose moiety to mono-rhamnolipids forming di-rhamnolipids, hence is often labelled rhamnosyltransferase 2.
15.
Research has shown that rhamnose, a chemical extracted from uncaria plants, can actively regenerate skin, making it feel plumper and more elastic.
16.
PVM BMCs in " Planctomyces limnophilus " are induced by the presence of fucose or rhamnose under aerobic conditions, but not by glucose.
17.
Specifically there are two main classes of rhamnolipids : mono-rhamnolipids and di-rhamnolipids, which consist of one or two rhamnose groups respectively.
18.
Although glucose is the most common sugar present in glucosides, many are known which yield rhamnose or iso-dulcite; these may be termed pentosides.
19.
Rhamnose is also a component of the outer cell membrane of acid-fast bacteria in the Mycobacterium genus, which includes the organism that causes tuberculosis.
20.
L-Rhamnose is abundant in biomass as a common constituent of glycolipids and glycosides, such as plant pigments, pectic polysaccharides, gums or biosurfactants.