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Biomolecules Survey Part 1: Carbohydrates Lecture Supplement page 76

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Most important aldoses: glucose, ribose, galactose. Learn by doing problems. 12 ... Which ribose OH becomes ribofuranose ether? X = OH: b-D-ribofuranose (RNA) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Biomolecules Survey Part 1: Carbohydrates Lecture Supplement page 76


1
Biomolecules Survey Part 1CarbohydratesLecture
Supplement page 76
2
Why Should I Study This?
  • Why is this topic important?
  • All organisms utilize carbohydrates ? important
    biomolecules
  • Nutrition carbos are more than just starch and
    sugar
  • Application of previous concepts

3
Origin of Carbohydrate
Before 1900
Glucose C6H12O6
no change
Sucrose C12H22O11
glucose fructose
4
Origin of Carbohydrate
Sugar general formula CnH2nOn
Cn(H2O)n
carbon hydrate
carbohydrate
Confirmation
sucrose H2SO4
5
Monosaccharide Molecular Structure
All common/ important monosaccharides have...
  • Chain of three to six carbons

C3 triose C4 tetrose C5 pentose C6 hexose
an aldohexose
  • One aldehyde or ketone

aldehyde aldose ketone ketose Aldoses more
common than ketoses
  • All other carbons are alcohols
  • H-C-OH or CH2OH

6
The (D)-Aldose FamilyThe (D)-Aldotrioses
One stereocenter ? two enantiomers
(L)-(-)-glyceraldehyde
(D)-()-glyceraldehyde
  • Stereochemical configuration
  • D OH above CH2OH on the right
  • Configuration of natural aldoses
  • L-aldoses generally unimportant
  • No correlation of /- and D/L

7
The (D)-Aldose FamilyFischer Projections
  • Determined relative structure of (D)-aldoses
  • Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1902
  • (D)-glyceraldehyde R configuration (x-ray
    crystallography 1950)

8
The (D)-Aldose FamilyThe (D)-Aldotetroses
Two stereocenters ? four stereoisomers
Two (D) and two (L)
(D)-(-)-erythrose
(D)-(-)-threose Not found in nature
9
The (D)-Aldose FamilyThe (D)-Aldopentoses
Three stereocenters ? eight stereoisomers
Four (D) and four (L)
(D)-(-)-ribose RNA (ribonucleic acid) DNA
(deoxyribonucleic acid)
(D)-()-xylose
(D)-(-)arabinose
(D)-(-)-lyxose Not found in nature
10
The (D)-Aldose FamilyThe (D)-Aldohexoses
Four stereocenters ? 16 stereoisomers ? eight
(D) and eight (L)
11
The (D)-Aldose FamilyThe (D)-Aldohexoses
Four stereocenters ? 16 stereoisomers ? eight (D)
and eight (L)
  • Must I memorize all of these structures?
  • Most important aldoses glucose, ribose,
    galactose
  • Learn by doing problems

12
Cyclic Monosaccharides
  • Many acyclic monosaccharides in equilibrium with
    more stable cyclic isomers
  • Example glucose

a-D-glucopyranose
OH axial less stable
36 at equilibrium in H2O
b-D-glucopyranose
OH equatorial more stable
64 at equilibrium in H2O
13
Cyclic MonosaccharidesAnomeric Carbon
Stereochemistry
a trans CH2OH, anomeric OH
b cis CH2OH, anomeric OH
Anomeric carbon
  • Was carbon of carbonyl in acyclic form
  • Anomeric OH variable stereochemistry
  • Anomeric ether has fixed stereochemistry
    (glycosides)

14
Cyclic MonosaccharidesHaworth Projections
a-D-glucopyranose
15
Cyclic MonosaccharidesFuranoses
X OH D-ribose X H D-2-deoxyribose
X OH b-D-ribofuranose (RNA) X H
b-D-2-deoxyribofuranose (DNA)
Which ribose OH becomes ribofuranose ether?
16
Cyclic MonosaccharidesFuranoses in DNA
A short segment of the DNA double helix
a or b?
17
Disaccharides
  • Composed of two monosaccharide molecules
  • Useful vocabulary
  • Linked by glycoside (an ether), part of acetal
    functional group
  • Other anomeric carbon hemiacetal
    functional group

18
DisaccharidesCarbohydrate Ring Numbering
  • Anomeric carbon receives lowest number
  • Carbon 1 in aldoses
  • Carbon 2 (rarely 3) in ketoses
  • All other carbons numbered in order

19
DisaccharidesMaltose
1,4-a-D-glucopyranosyl-D-glucopyranose
  • Product of partial hydrolysis of starch
  • Present in juice of cereal grains (from which
    beer is brewed)
  • Compare with cellobiose (from partial hydrolysis
    of cellulose)
  • An a-glycoside easily digested by mammals

20
DisaccharidesLactose
1,4-b-D-galactopyranosyl-D-glucopyranose
  • Present in mammalian milk (up to 8 by weight
    varies with species)
  • Readily digested by infant mammals requires
    enzyme lactase
  • Adults often less tolerant due to low levels of
    lactase

21
DisaccharidesSucrose
1,2-b-D-fructofuranosyl-a-D-glucopyranose
  • Unusual structure 1,2-a-glycoside
  • Most common disaccharide in nature
  • Produced only by plants such as sugar cane, sugar
    beats
  • Annual commercial world production 9 x 109 kg
    yr-1 (4 x 1013 sugar packets)
  • An a-glycoside readily digested by mammals

22
Polysaccharides
  • Polysaccharide hydrolysis yields many
    monosaccharide molecules
  • Most important are glucose polymers cellulose,
    starch (high molecular weight)

23
PolysaccharidesCellulose
  • Linear 1,4-b-D-glucopyranose polymer
  • Most abundant organic substance in nature
  • Function support structure in plants
  • Wood is 50 cellulose by weight
  • Strength due to intermolecular hydrogen bonding
  • Not easily digested by mammals

24
Polysaccharides
  • Starch
  • Two forms amylose, amylopectin
  • 1,4-a-D-glucopyranose polymer
  • Function plant glucose/energy storage
  • Hydrolysis ? glucopyranose
  • Easily digested by mammals
  • Amylose
  • Linear polymer of 1K-6K glucopyranose
  • 20-25 of starch
  • Amylopectin
  • Branched polymer containing 106 glucopyranose
  • 75-80 of starch

25
End Exam 1
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