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HBB 2116 Carbohydrates 1

Carbohydrates play many important roles in living organisms. They can be divided into three main classes based on size: monosaccharides, oligosaccharides, and polysaccharides. Monosaccharides are the simplest form and include common hexoses like glucose. In solution, monosaccharides form ring structures called pyranoses. Glucose exists as two anomeric forms, alpha and beta, which interconvert through mutarotation. Carbohydrate polymers serve important structural and energy storage functions in cells and tissues.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
49 views40 pages

HBB 2116 Carbohydrates 1

Carbohydrates play many important roles in living organisms. They can be divided into three main classes based on size: monosaccharides, oligosaccharides, and polysaccharides. Monosaccharides are the simplest form and include common hexoses like glucose. In solution, monosaccharides form ring structures called pyranoses. Glucose exists as two anomeric forms, alpha and beta, which interconvert through mutarotation. Carbohydrate polymers serve important structural and energy storage functions in cells and tissues.

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Nickson Onchoka
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Carbohydrates: Introduction

 Carbohydrates are the most abundant


biomolecules on Earth and have various
important roles:
 Certain carbohydrates (sugar and starch)
are a dietary staple in most parts of the
world.
 The oxidation of carbohydrates is the
central energy-yielding pathway in most
nonphotosynthetic cells.
 Carbohydrate polymers (also called glycans)
serve as structural and protective elements in
the cell walls of bacteria and plants and in the
connective tissues of animals.
 Other carbohydrate polymers lubricate
skeletal joints and participate in recognition
and adhesion between cells.
 Complex carbohydrate polymers covalently
attached to proteins or lipids act as signals
that determine the intracellular location or
metabolic fate of these hybrid molecules.
 We are going to discuss the major classes of
carbohydrates and glycoconjugates and
provides a few examples of their many
structural and functional roles.
 Carbohydrates are defined as polyhydroxy
aldehydes or ketones, or substances that yield
such compounds on hydrolysis.
 Many, but not all, carbohydrates have the
empirical formula (CH2O)n.
 Some also contain nitrogen, phosphorus, or
sulfur.
 There are three major size classes of
carbohydrates:
 Monosaccharides, Oligosaccharides, and
polysaccharides
 The word “saccharide” is derived from the
Greek sakcharon, meaning “sugar”.
 Monosaccharides are simple sugars,
consisting of a single polyhydroxy aldehyde
or ketone unit.
 The most abundant monosaccharide in nature
is the six-carbon sugar D-glucose, sometimes
referred to as dextrose.
 Monosaccharides of four or more carbons
tend to have cyclic structures.
 Oligosaccharides consist of short chains of
monosaccharide units, or residues, joined by
characteristic linkages called glycosidic
bonds.
 The most abundant are the disaccharides, with
two monosaccharide units.
 Typical is sucrose (cane sugar), which
consists of the six-carbon sugars D-glucose
and D-fructose.
 All common monosaccharides and
disaccharides have names ending with the
suffix “-ose.”
 In cells, most oligosaccharides consisting of
three or more units do not occur as free
entities but are joined to nonsugar molecules
(lipids or proteins) forming glycoconjugates
 The polysaccharides are sugar polymers
containing more than 20 or so monosaccharide
units; some have hundreds or thousands of
units.
 Some polysaccharides, such as cellulose, are
linear chains; others, such as glycogen, are
branched.
 Both glycogen and cellulose consist of
recurring units of D-glucose, but they differ
in the type of glycosidic linkage and
consequently have strikingly different
properties and biological roles.
Monosaccharides
 The simplest of the carbohydrates, the
monosaccharides, are either aldehydes or
ketones with two or more hydroxyl groups;
the six-carbon monosaccharides glucose
and fructose have five hydroxyl groups.
 Monosaccharides are colorless, crystalline
solids that are freely soluble in water but
insoluble in nonpolar solvents. Most have a
sweet taste.
 The backbones of common monosaccharides
are unbranched carbon chains in which all the
carbon atoms are linked by single bonds.
 In the open-chain form, one of the carbon
atoms is double-bonded to an oxygen atom to
form a carbonyl group; each of the other
carbon atoms has a hydroxyl group.
 If the carbonyl group is at an end of the
carbon chain (that is, in an aldehyde group)
the monosaccharide is an aldose.
 If the carbonyl group is at any other position
(in a ketone group) the monosaccharide is a
ketose.
 Thus monosaccharides consist of two families,
the aldoses and ketoses
 Below are the structure of some common
monosaccharides:
Three – carbon monosaccharides. The carbonyl
group in each is shaded
Six – carbon monosaccharides
Five – carbon monosaccharides
 The simplest monosaccharides are the two
three-carbon trioses: glyceraldehyde, an
aldotriose, and dihydroxyacetone, a
ketotriose.
 Monosaccharides with four carbon in their
backbone are called tetroses, with five are
pentoses, with six are hexoses, and with
seven are called heptoses.
 There are aldoses and ketoses of each of
these chain lengths: aldotetroses and
ketotetroses, aldopentoses and
ketopentoses.....
 The hexoses, which include the aldohexose
D-glucose and the ketohexose D-fructose,
are the most common monosaccharides in
nature.
 The aldopentoses D-ribose and 2-deoxy-D-
ribose are components of nucleotides and
nucleic acids.
Monosaccharides have asymmetrical center
 All the monosaccharides except
dihydroxyacetone contain one or more
asymmetric (chiral) carbon atoms and thus
occur in optically active isomeric forms.
 The simplest aldose, glyceraldehyde,
contains one chiral center (the middle
carbon atom) and therefore has two
different optical isomers, or enantiomers.
 The enantiomers are mirror images of each
other
 One of the two enantiomers is, by convention,
designated the D isomer, the other the L
isomer.
 The absolute configurations of sugars are
known from x-ray crystallography.
 To represent three-dimensional sugar
structures on paper, we often use Fischer
projection formulas shown below.
 In Fischer projection formulas, horizontal
bonds project out of the plane of the paper,
toward the reader; vertical bonds project
behind the plane of the paper, away from the
reader.
Fischer projection of glyceraldehyde
Aldolases and Ketoses

 The series of D-aldoses having from three


to six carbon atoms, shown as projection
formulas, below.
 The carbon atoms in red are chiral centers.
 In all these D isomers, the chiral carbon
most distant from the carbonyl carbon has
the same configuration as the chiral carbon
in D-glyceraldehyde.
 The sugars named in boxes are the most
common in nature.
Ketoses
Ketoses
 In general, a molecule with n chiral centers
can have 2n stereoisomers.
 Glyceraldehyde has 21 = 2; the aldohexoses,
with four chiral centers, have 24 = 16
stereoisomers.
 The stereoisomers of monosaccharides of
each carbon-chain length can be divided into
two groups that differ in the configuration
about the chiral center most distant from the
carbonyl carbon.
 Those in which the configuration at this
reference carbon is the same as that of D-
glyceraldehyde are designated D isomers.
 Those with the same configuration as L-
glyceraldehyde are L isomers.
 When the hydroxyl group on the reference
carbon is on the right in a projection formula
that has the carbonyl carbon at the top, the
sugar is the D isomer; when on the left, it is
the L isomer.
 Of the 16 possible aldohexoses, eight are D
forms and eight are L.
 Most of the hexoses of living organisms are D
isomers.
Epimers
 Two sugars that differ only in the
configuration around one carbon atom are
called epimers.
 D-glucose and D-mannose, which differ
only in the stereochemistry at C-2, are
epimers, as are D-glucose and D-galactose
(which differ at C-4).
 Some sugars occur naturally in their L form;
example is are L-arabinose
Monosaccharides form cyclic structures
 So far we have represented the structures
of aldoses and ketoses as straight-chain
molecules.
 But in aqueous solution, aldotetroses and all
monosaccharides with five or more carbon
atoms in the backbone occur predominantly
as cyclic (ring) structures in which the
carbonyl group has formed a covalent bond
with the oxygen of a hydroxyl group along
the chain.
 The formation of these ring structures is the
result of a general reaction between alcohols
and aldehydes or ketones to form derivatives
called hemiacetals or hemiketals.
 These structures contain an additional
asymmetric carbon atom and thus can exist in
two stereoisomeric forms.
 For example, D-glucose exists in solution as
an intramolecular hemiacetal in which the free
hydroxyl group at C-5 has reacted with the
aldehydic C-1, rendering the latter carbon
asymmetric and producing two stereoisomers,
designated α and β anomers
 The designation α indicates that the hydroxyl
group at the anomeric center is, in a Fischer
projection, on the same side as the hydroxyl
attached at the farthest chiral center, whereas
β indicates that these hydroxyl groups are on
opposite sides.
Formation of the two cyclic forms of D-glucose
 These six-membered ring compounds are
called pyranoses because they resemble the
six-membered ring compound pyran.
 The systematic names for the two ring forms
of D-glucose are α-D-glucopyranose and β-
D-glucopyranose.
 Aldoses also exist in cyclic forms having five-
membered rings, called furanoses because
they resemble the five-membered ring
compound furan.
 Only aldoses having five or more carbon
atoms can form pyranose rings.
 Isomeric forms of monosaccharides that differ
only in their configuration about the
hemiacetal or hemiketal carbon atom are
called anomers.
 The hemiacetal (or carbonyl) carbon atom is
called the anomeric carbon.
 The α and β anomers of D-glucose
interconvert in aqueous solution by a process
called mutarotation
 Thus, a solution of α-D-glucose and a
solution of β-D-glucose eventually form
identical equilibrium mixtures having identical
optical properties.
 Ketohexoses also occur in and anomeric
forms.
 In these compounds the hydroxyl group at C-
5 (or C-6) reacts with the keto group at C-2,
forming a furanose (or pyranose) ring
containing a hemiketal linkage.
Pyran and furan
Other hexose derivatives
 In addition to simple hexoses such as
glucose, galactose, and mannose, there are
a number of sugar derivatives in which a
hydroxyl group in the parent compound is
replaced with another substituent, or a
carbon atom is oxidized to a carboxyl
group.
 In glucosamine, galactosamine, and
mannosamine, the hydroxyl at C-2 of the
parent compound is replaced with an amino
group.
Monosaccharides are reducing sugars
 Monosaccharides can be oxidized by
relatively mild oxidizing agents such as
cupric (Cu2+) ion.
 The carbonyl carbon is oxidized to a
carboxyl group.
 Glucose and other sugars capable of
reducing cupric ion are called reducing
sugars.
 They form enediols, which are converted to
aldonic acids and then to a complex mixture
of 2-, 3-, 4-, and 6-carbon acids.
 This is the basis of Fehling’s reaction, a
qualitative test for the presence of reducing
sugar.
 By measuring the amount of oxidizing agent
reduced by a solution of a sugar, it is also
possible to estimate the concentration of that
sugar.
 Oxidation of the anomeric carbon of glucose
and other sugars under alkaline conditions is
the basis for Fehling’s reaction.
 The cuprous ion (Cu+) produced forms a red
cuprous oxide precipitate.
 In the hemiacetal (ring) form, C-1 of glucose
cannot be oxidized by complexed Cu2+.
 However, the open-chain form is in
equilibrium with the ring form, and eventually
the oxidation reaction goes to completion.
 The reaction with Cu2+ is complex, yielding a
mixture of products and reducing 3 mol of
Cu2+ per mole of glucose.

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