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Carbohydrates. Structure of Carbohydrates. Properties of Carbohydrates. Most abundant class of organic molecules Source: Photosynthesis Classification Monosaccharides Stereoisomers Aldehydes (Aldose) or Ketones (Ketose) Number of Carbons (ie 3=triose; 6=hexose)
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Properties of Carbohydrates • Most abundant class of organic molecules • Source: Photosynthesis • Classification • Monosaccharides • Stereoisomers • Aldehydes (Aldose) or Ketones (Ketose) • Number of Carbons (ie 3=triose; 6=hexose) • Combined: Aldotriose/Ketotetrose • Polymers • Oligosaccharides (2- ~20 sugars) • Polysaccharides (> ~20 sugars)
Biological Roles of Carbohydrates • Energy source • Energy storage • Cell walls • Recognition events • Between proteins (targeting) • Between cells • Signalling • Components of other biological molecules • Antibiotics • Enzyme cofactors • Nucleic Acids
Chirality D- versus L- determined by chirality of highest number carbon (from aldehyde or ketone)
Aldoses Figure 8-1
Aldoses Figure 8-1
Ketoses Figure 8-2
Ketoses Figure 8-2
Epimers(stereoisomers differing by configuration of only one of several chiral centers)
Epimers(stereoisomers differing by configuration of only one of several chiral centers)
Mutarotation Creation of new chiral center
Anomeric Carbon Atom Mutarotation Reversible Creation of new asymmetric center
Anomers • Anomeric carbon atom • Most oxidized carbon atom • Shares electrons with 2 oxygen atoms • -configuration has -OH on opposite side of ring from CH2OH group at chiral center that designates D- or L-
Examples of Nomenclature Configuration of anomeric carbon -D-glucopyranose -D-fructofuranose Anomeric carbon modification: ose: reducing oside: non-reducing Configuration of sugar Sugar prefix Ring Type *not required
Chair Conformations of -D-glucopyranose Equatorial Axial Chair and Boat Forms Equitorial and Axial Substituents Steric Crowding: equitorial more stable Figure 8-5
Deoxy Sugars Note: 5-membered ring form is used in biological systems
Glycosidic Linkages (glycoside) Acetal Stable: no mutarotation Non-reducing sugar (no free anomeric C atom)
Reducing test • Free Aldehydes are reductants • If free to mutarotate sugar is a reductant • Must have only –OH at anomeric carbon Cu2O Cupric oxide brick-red precipitate
Sucrose (non-reducing) OR: Glc(α1 β2)Fru
Sucrose OR: Glc(α1 β2)Fru
-Maltose Glc(α14)Glc
-Lactose Gal(β14)Glc
Nomenclature • Recognize individual monosaccharides • Drop the –se and add root for rings • 6 member: pyran • 5 member: furan • Attach: • ose: can mutarotate • oside: canNOT mutarotate • osyl: not terminal residue • Indicate carbon to carbon number linkage (##) • Label each residue with D or L and α or β
Oligosaccharides • Generally complex • Heteropolymers • Branched • Various Cellular Functions • Receptors • Antigens • Signal transduction • Trafficking
Sugar groups on glycoproteins frequently function in recognition
Polysaccharides • Simpler structures • Homopolymers • Less branching • Limited Cellular Functions • Structural/Protective • Energy Storage
Functions of Polysaccharides • Structural - e.g. plant cell walls, cement between cells (animals): • -linkages stable to enzymatic cleavage • Storage - e.g. glycogen as energy reserves: • -linkages are readily cleaved • Potential osmotic problem • Accessibility for energy production • -linkages • Branching