2022
DOI: 10.1111/jfbc.14401
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Research progress in the preparation, structural characterization, bioactivities, and potential applications of sulfated agarans from the genus Gracilaria

Abstract: The genus Gracilaria produces 80% of the world's industrial agar. Agar of this genus is a promising biologically active polymer, which has been used in the human diet and folk medicine, alternative for weight loss, treatment of diarrhea, etc. With more attention paid to the genus Gracilaria‐sulfated agarans (GSAs), they exhibited multitudinous health benefits in antioxidant, antiviral, antibacterial, prebiotics, anti‐tumor, anticoagulant, and antidiabetic. Various preparation procedures of GSAs making the dive… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 125 publications
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“…Similarly, the manufacture of the agar is decentralized, with many producers and distributors. More fundamentally, the quality of agar is affected by high heterogeneity of numerous factors, including species, growing environments, harvesting and extraction methods, post-extraction treatments, complexity of carbohydrates, their diverse modifications, and contaminants such as fatty acids, phycobiliproteins, pigments, and secondary metabolites [see ( Li & Liu, 2022 ) and refs therein]. And while vendors of scientific agar seek to remove factors that can inhibit microbial growth, the manufacturing processes are proprietary (i.e., opaque), the vendors do not reveal key variables such as species source, and detailed quality control measures are typically not provided to end-users.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, the manufacture of the agar is decentralized, with many producers and distributors. More fundamentally, the quality of agar is affected by high heterogeneity of numerous factors, including species, growing environments, harvesting and extraction methods, post-extraction treatments, complexity of carbohydrates, their diverse modifications, and contaminants such as fatty acids, phycobiliproteins, pigments, and secondary metabolites [see ( Li & Liu, 2022 ) and refs therein]. And while vendors of scientific agar seek to remove factors that can inhibit microbial growth, the manufacturing processes are proprietary (i.e., opaque), the vendors do not reveal key variables such as species source, and detailed quality control measures are typically not provided to end-users.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…is a red alga found worldwide and is commonly used as the main raw material (80%) in the agar industry, followed by Gelidium spp. (20%) [20,21]. Gracilaria fisheri is widespread in Southern Thailand and has previously been described as abundant.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%