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Carbohydrates. 1. Energy source for plants and animals 2. Source of carbon in metabolic processes 3. Storage form of energy 4. Structural elements of.

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Presentation on theme: "Carbohydrates. 1. Energy source for plants and animals 2. Source of carbon in metabolic processes 3. Storage form of energy 4. Structural elements of."— Presentation transcript:

1 Carbohydrates

2 1. Energy source for plants and animals 2. Source of carbon in metabolic processes 3. Storage form of energy 4. Structural elements of cells and tissues Functions of Carbohydrates

3 Originally thought to have the formula (CH 2 O)n. Now known that only simple monosaccharides obey this rule. Carbohydrate- polyhydroxy aldehyde or ketone or a larger molecule which can be hydrolyzed to a polyhydroxy aldehyde or ketone. Carbohydrates

4 Monosaccharide- one sugar residue. Most well known is glucose, C 6 H 12 O 6 Oligosaccharide- a few (2-9) sugar residues. Most well known is cane sugar or sucrose, C 12 H 22 O 11. Polysaccharide- many sugar residues. Most common are glycogen, starch and cellulose, from animals, plants and plants. Classification of Carbohydrates

5 Monosaccharides Two classes- aldoses and ketoses In our formula, (CH 2 O)n, n is 3 or more Simplest are dihydroxycetone, a ketose where n=3, and glyceraldehyde, an aldose where n=3 Stereoisomers arise when there is a chiral carbon Chiral carbon- four different substituents bonded

6 Stereochemistry In biochemistry, we use the D-L system (similar principle to the R-S system usually used in organic, but everything is compared with glyceraldehyde)

7 Stereochemistry L-glyceraldehyde D-glyceraldehyde

8 Fischer Projections Emil Fischer Vertical lines into plane (away from you) Horizontal lines out of plane (towards you) C1 (IUPAC nomenclature) on top

9 Stereochemistry The D and L designation of sugars with n > 3 are taken from the chiral carbon furthest from the carbonyl carbon. Other important terminology: Enantiomers- D- and L-sugars are enantiomers (mirror image molecules) Diastereomers- nonsuperimposable, non mirror image Epimers- differ in arrangement about one other chiral carbons.

10 Most 5 and 6 Carbon Sugars are in Ring Form (Chair Conformation) Based on molecules Pyran and Furan Carbohydrates can exist in either, but generally one is much more common.

11 Interchanging Fisher and Haworth Projections Haworth Projection- shows the ring configuration. 1. Carbonyl reacts with OH of carbon 5. 2. H of C5 OH is transferred to carbonyl O. 3. O of C5 OH becomes part of ring. 4.  - and ß-anomers are possible. Anomer- differ in arrangement around carbonyl carbon.

12 An Equilibrium Exists Between Possible Structures

13 Important Simple Monosaccharides 1. Glucose 2. Mannose 3. Galactose 4. Fructose 5. Ribose

14 Important Monosaccharide Derivatives: Deoxysugars Deoxyribose (Important in DNA) L -Fucose (Important in immune recognition, e.g.)

15 Important Monosaccharide Derivatives: Amino sugars Glucosamine Galactosamine N-Acetylglucosamine N-Acetylgalactosamine

16 Important Monosaccharide Derivatives: Oxidized Sugars Gluconolactone Gluconic acid Glucuronic acid

17 Important Monosaccharide Derivatives: Others N-Acetylneuraminic acid, a sialic acid (many modified sialic acids exist)

18 Reactions of Monosaccharides 1. Mutarotation. 2. Oxidation to CO 2 + H 2 O Reactions due to aldehyde group 3. Reducing sugars. 4. Reduction to polyols. Reactions due to alcohol group 5. Esterification. 6. Formation of acetals, also called glycosides

19 Disaccharides: The Glycosidic Bond Glycosidic bond- bond between a sugar and an alcohol (another sugar) or amine (a base) through an O- or N- linkage.

20  - versus ß-Glycosidic Bonds Refers to the configuration at the anomeric carbon involved in the bond. Important in that  -linkages are digestible, ß- linkages are not.

21 Disaccharides: Use Common Names O-ß-D-galactopyranosyl-1 ! 4-D-glucopyranose Short-hand: Galß1 ! 4Glc Common: Lactose

22 Disaccharides: Use Common Names Sucrose: Glc (  1 ! ß2) Fru

23 Disaccharides: Maltose and Isomaltose What is the shorhand notation for these molecules?

24 Oligosaccharides Can be arranged in a plethora of ways (important in glycoproteins and glycolipids).  and ß linkages 1,3; 1,4; 1,6 linkages any two (or more) monosaccharides can be linked together

25 Oligosaccharides Function in recognition: type O blood  2,6 11  1,4  1,2

26 Oligosaccharides Function in recognition: type O blood type A blood  2,6 11  1,4  1,2  2,6 11  1,4  1,2  1,3

27 Oligosaccharides Function in recognition: type O blood type A blood type B blood  2,6 11  1,4  1,2  2,6 11  1,4  1,2  1,3  2,6 11  1,4  1,2  1,3

28 Oligosaccharides Function in recognition: parasites Other functions of oligos on proteins protect protein from catabolism allow hormone to bind hormone receptor

29 Homopolysaccharides: Cellulose Cellulose: ß1,4 linked glucose linear; undigestable by mammals Plays a structural role in plants: hydrogen bonds

30 Homopolysaccharides: Starch  1,4 linked glucose with some  1,6 linkages (branched) branch every 12-20 Glc residues digestable by mammals- storage form of energy in plants

31 Homopolysaccharides: Glycogen  1,4 linked glucose with many  1,6 linkages (branched) branch every 8-12 Glc residues energy storage in mammals

32 Homopolysaccharides: Chitin Chitin: ß1,4 linked GlcNAc used by insects and crustaceans for shells (structural)

33 Heteropolysaccharides: Glycosaminoglycans Mucopolysaccharides: used in lubricating joints, mucous secretions Hyaluronic acid: GlcNAc - Glucuronic acid in alternating ß1,3 and ß1,4 linkages Chondroitin sulftate: GalNAc-6-SO 4 - Glucuronic acid in alternating ß1,3 and ß1,4 linkages


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