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Macromolecules & Carbohydrates

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Presentation on theme: "Macromolecules & Carbohydrates"— Presentation transcript:

1 Macromolecules & Carbohydrates
Lecture 3 Dr. Mamoun Ahram

2 Cell's weight

3 Subunits Subunits: the small building blocks (precursors) used to make macromolecules Macromolecules: large molecules made of subunits

4 Macromolecules Carbohydrates (monosaccharides) Proteins (amino acids)
Nucleic acids (nucleotides) Lipids (fatty acids) Except for lipids, these macromolecules are also considered polymers

5

6 Relationship (monomers and polymers)

7 How water is removed? Mechanism 1: One subunit contributes an “H” and the other subunit contributes an “OH” Mechanism 2: One subunit contributes 2 “H” the other subunit contributes an “O”

8 Carbohydrates

9 Resource This lecture Campbell and Farrell’s Biochemistry, Chapter 16

10 What are they? Carbohydrates are polyhydroxy aldehydes or ketones
Saccharide is another name for a carbohydrate

11 Functions Source of energy Structure (cellulose and chitin)
Building blocks Cellular recognition

12 Classification I By the number of sugars that constitute the molecule
Monosaccharides Disaccharides Oligosaccharides Polysaccharides

13 Monosaccharides Basic chemical formula: (CH2O)n
They contain two or more hydroxyl groups

14 Drawing sugars Fisher projections or perspective structural formulas
Forward Backward Top (C1): Most highly oxidized C

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16

17 Numbering carbons…again

18 Numbering order of compounds with more than one functional group
Carboxylic acid Aldehyde Ketone Alcohol Amine Alkyne = alkene Alkane

19 Classification 2 By the number of carbon atoms they contain Triose
Tetrose Pentose Hexose Heptose

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21

22 Trioses

23 Glyceraldehyde Chiral carbon

24 Constitutional isomers
Isomerism Isomers Stereoisomers Enantiomers L-isomers D-isomers Diastereomers Non-epimers Epimers Constitutional isomers

25 Structural isomers Same number of atoms, different connectivity

26 Stereoisomers Same number of atoms and connectivity, but not superimposable

27 Number of possible stereoisomers
2n (n is the number of chiral carbons in a sugar molecule)

28 Isomers of glucose

29 Mirror images and non-superimposable, then…enantiomers

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31 Light polarization

32 Sugar enantiomers (D- vs. L-)

33 Which one(s) is a chiral carbon?

34 Stereoisomers, but non-mirror images and non-superimposable, then…diastereomers
OH H H OH

35 Diastereomers that differ in the orientation of one chiral carbon…epimers

36 Constitutional isomers
Isomerism Isomers Stereoisomers Enantiomers L-isomers D-isomers Diastereomers Non-epimers Epimers Constitutional isomers

37 Formation of a ring structure

38 Ring structures

39 Example

40 Acetal/ketal vs. hemiacetal/hemiketal
Hemiacetal and hemiketal: ether and alcohol on same carbon Acetal and ketal: two ethers on same carbon What is the difference between hemiacetal and hemiketal and the difference between acetal and ketal?

41 Hemiacetal vs. hemiketal

42 Haworth vs. Fischer projections

43 Fischer vs. Haworth Left-right vs. up-down

44 Anomers

45 α vs β fructose

46 - vs. -glucopyranose

47 Cyclic fructose

48 Cyclic aldohexoses

49 Cyclic ribofuranose

50 Modified sugars

51 Sugar esters (esterification)
What is the reacting functional group? Where does it react? What are the end products? Where are they used?

52 Sugar acids (oxidation)
Where is it oxidized? What does it form?

53 Example 1

54 Example 2

55 Example 3

56 Note Oxidation of ketoses to carboxylic acids does not occur, but they can be oxidized because of formation of enediol form

57 Benedict’s test

58 Sugar alcohols (reduction)
What does it form? Examples include sorbitol, mannitol, and xylitol, which are used to sweeten food products

59 Deoxy sugars One or more hydroxyl groups are replaced by hydrogens
An example is 2-deoxyribose, which is a constituent of DNA

60 N-glycosides What is the reacting functional group? Where does it react? What are the end products? Where are they used? Examples: nucleotides (DNA and RNA)

61 Amino sugars What is the reacting functional group? Where does it react? What are the end products? Where are they used? Further modification by acetylation

62 O-Glycosides What is the reacting functional group? Where does it react? What are the end products? Where are they used?

63 Formation of full acetal

64 Disaccharides What are disaccharide? Oligosaccharides? Hetero- vs. homo-? What is the type of reaction? What is a residue? Synthesizing enzymes are glycosyltransferases Do they undergo mutarotation? Are products stable?

65 Distinctions of disaccharides
The 2 specific sugar monomers involved and their stereoconfigurations (D- or L-) The carbons involved in the linkage (C-1, C-2, C-4, or C-6) The order of the two monomer units, if different (example: galactose followed by glucose) The anomeric configuration of the OH group on carbon 1 of each residue (α or β)

66 Abundant disaccharides
Configuration Designation Naming (common vs. systematic) Reducing vs. non-reducing

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69 α vs β fructose

70 Sucrose

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72 Raffinose What are oligosaccharide? Example: raffinose
It is found in peas and beans Homework What are the names of monosaccharides that make up raffinose? What is the monosaccharide that is attached to what disaccharide?

73 Oligosaccharides as drugs
Streptomycin and erythromycin (antibiotics) Doxorubicin (cancer chemotherapy) Digoxin (cardiovascular disease)

74 Polysaccharides What are polysaccharides?
Homopolysaccharide (homoglycan) vs. heteropolysaccharides

75 Features of polysaccharides
Monosaccharides Length Branching

76 Storage polysaccharides
Glycogen Starch Dextran

77 Glycogen Which organisms? Which organs?

78 Structure

79 Starch Which organisms? Forms: amylase (10-20%) amylopectin (80-90%)

80 Dextran A storage polysaccharide Yeast and bacteria
-(1-6)-D-glucose with branched chains Branches: 1-2, 1-3, or 1-4

81 Structural polysaccharides

82 Cellulose Which organism? Degradation?

83 Structural features? Why?

84 Pectin What is the precursor? Where does it exist?

85 Chitin What is the precursor? Where does it exist?

86 Glycosaminoglycans What are they? Where are they located?
Derivatives of an amino sugar, either glucosamine or galactosamine At least one of the sugars in the repeating unit has a negatively charged carboxylate or sulfate group

87

88 Localization and function of GAG
Comments Hyaluronate synovial fluid, vitreous humor, ECM of loose connective tissue the lubricant fluid , shock absorbing As many as 25,000 disaccharide units Chondroitin sulfate cartilage, bone, heart valves most abundant GAG Heparan sulfate basement membranes, components of cell surfaces contains higher acetylated glucosamine than heparin Heparin component of intracellular granules of mast cells lining the arteries of the lungs, liver and skin A natural anticoagulant Dermatan sulfate skin, blood vessels, heart valves Keratan sulfate cornea, bone, cartilage aggregated with chondroitin sulfates  Only one not having uronic acid

89 Bond orientation Glycosidic bonds in chondroitin 4-sulfate, hyaluronate, dermatan sulfate, and keratan sulfate are alternating  (13) and (14) linkages Exception is heparin

90 Proteoglycans Lubricants Structural components in connective tissue
Mediate adhesion of cells to the extracellular matrix Bind factors that stimulate cell proliferation

91 Bacterial cell wall

92 Peptidoglycan

93 Gram-positive vs. gram-negative bacteria

94 Why? Bacterial cell wall is composed of 1 or 2 bilayers and peptidoglycan shell Gram-positive: One bilayer and thick peptidoglycan outer shell Gram-negative: Two bilayers with thin peptidoglycan shell in between

95 How? Gram-positive: pentaglycine bridge connects tetrapeptides
Gram-negative: direct amide bond between tetrapeptides

96 Glycoproteins The carbohydrates of glycoproteins are linked to the protein component through either O-glycosidic or N-glycosidic bonds The N-glycosidic linkage is through the amide group of asparagine (Asn, N) The O-glycosidic linkage is to the hydroxyl of serine (Ser, S), threonine (Thr, T) or hydroxylysine (hLys)

97 Types of protein-linked sugars
Glucose (Glc) Galactose (Gal) Mannose (Man) Fucose (Fuc) N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) N-acetylneuraminic acid (NANA)

98 Significance of protein-linked sugars
Soluble proteins as well as membrane proteins Purpose: Protein folding Protein targeting prolonging protein half-life Cell-cell communication Signaling

99 Blood typing Three different structures: The difference: A, B, and O
N-acetylgalactosamine (for A) Galactose (for B) None (for O)

100 Sialic acid N-acetylneuraminate
Precursor: the amino sugar, neuraminic acid Location: a terminal residue of oligosaccharide chains of glycoproteins Effect?


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