Definition of trehalose in English:
trehalose
nountrɪˈhɑːləʊsˈtriːhələʊstrəˈhäˌlōsˈtrēhəˌlōs
mass nounChemistry A sugar of the disaccharide class produced by some fungi, yeasts, and similar organisms.
Example sentencesExamples
- Among them, the most effective in preserving a more native-like structure are the disaccharides sucrose and trehalose in dry films and the polymer dextran in wet films.
- Recent studies have demonstrated a stabilizing effect on various membranes by trehalose, raffinose, sucrose as well as fructo- and gluco-oligosaccharides.
- We have recently shown that films made from a mixture of trehalose and sucrose are stable and transparent, and that proteins retain their structure when incorporated in them.
- Remarkably, this ability appears to stem from a small number of common mechanisms involving accumulation of two disaccharides, trehalose and sucrose.
- Over the past three decades we and others have established that disaccharides such as trehalose and sucrose are almost certainly involved in stabilizing the dry cells.
Origin
Mid 19th century: from trehala (from Turkish, denoting a sweet substance derived from insect cocoons) + -ose2.