Oligosaccarides and Polysaccharides - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 15
About This Presentation
Title:

Oligosaccarides and Polysaccharides

Description:

a reducing sugar; exhibits mutarotation. 1,4-acetal linkage ... by yeast; CAN be digested by bacteria in ruminants and termites (which have -glucosidase enzyme) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:95
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 16
Provided by: unc86
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Oligosaccarides and Polysaccharides


1
Oligosaccarides and Polysaccharides
  • Complex
  • Carbohydrates

2
Lactose, a disaccharide
  • a reducing sugar exhibits mutarotation
  • 1,4-acetal linkage between 2 monomeric sugars
  • acidic hydrolysis yields galactose and glucose
    (11).

3
Maltose, a disaccharide
  • a reducing sugar mutarotates
  • acidic hydrolysis yields only glucose
  • can be digested by humans fermented by yeast.

4
Cellobiose, a disaccharide
  • a reducing sugar mutarotates
  • can NOT be digested by humans nor fermented by
    yeast CAN be digested by bacteria in ruminants
    and termites (which have ?-glucosidase enzyme).

5
Sucrose, a disaccharide
  • NOT a reducing sugar NOT a hemiacetal
    does NOT
    undergo mutarotation
  • hydrolysis yields glucose plus fructose (called
    invert sugar because rotation of polarized
    light changes sign).

6
Cellulose, a polysaccharide
  • acid hydrolysis yields only glucose
  • can have thousands of monomers linked only one
    anomeric carbon mutarotation occurs, NOT
    observed
  • rigid structure hydrolyzed by ?-glucosidase
    enzymes.

7
Starch a mixture of linear and branched
polysaccharides
  • energy storage for plants (potatoes)
  • hydrolyzed readily by humans yields only glucose.

8
Starch the branched component
  • a much larger and more highly branched
    polysaccharide (GLYCOGEN) provides energy storage
    in animals.

9
Ethanol production
  • Ethanol can be produced by fermentation of simple
    sugars promoted by yeast.
  • Corn and other grains are major sources of
    simple sugars, but much more carbohydrate-containi
    ng biomass is in the form of polysaccharides such
    as cellulose.

10
Ethanol production
  • Efforts are now underway to utilize the otherwise
    wasted (as a fuel source) polysaccharides by
    hydrolyzing them to their component
    monosaccharides followed by fermentation.
  • Other plant sources of both simple and complex
    carbohydrates are being investigated as possible
    sources of ethanol for fuel.
  • These include switchgrass, sugar cane, and even
    kudzu.

11
Other important carbohydrates
12
Cell-Surface Carbohydrates Blood Typing
  • The surface of human blood cells has proteins
    covalently bound via glycoside bonds to
    oligosaccharides that serve as antigens.
  • For a human to accept blood from a donor, their
    blood types must be compatible otherwise,
    agglutination (clotting) occurs.
  • Compatibility depends on the identity of the
    sugars in the oligosaccharides bound to the
    surface proteins.

13
Type A Blood
14
Type B Blood
15
Type O Blood
Recent research has led to isolation of a
bacterial enzyme that cleaves the sugar bonded
to the 3-position of galactose in type A and B
peptides to make O-type
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com