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Announcements & Agenda (04/11/07) New Extra Credit Assignment Due Monday Pick Up Old Graded Stuff Pick Up Flowchart if you were absent Monday Quiz Friday (13.4, 13.5, & Ch 14) Exam Fri 04/20 (Ch 13,14,15) Will Post Practice Exam Soon! Today Finish Cyclic Monosaccharides Reactions of carbohydrates Disaccharides Polysaccaharides 1 What sugar is this? 0% 1. Mannose 0% 2. Glucose 0% 3. Fructose 0% 4. Galactose 1 2 3 4 5 2 Is this the L- form or the D-form? 0% 1. L 0% 2. D 0% 3. B 1 2 3 4 5 3 Which Structure is Correct? 0% 1. A 0% 2. B 0% 3. C 0% 4. D 1 2 3 4 5 4 Last Time: Formation of Cyclic Glucose Two “anomers” possible: a and b; this one is alpha b/c the –OH is opposite the -CH2OH group! 5 Mutarotation: Interconversion of Anomers • cyclic structures open and close. • a-D-glucose converts to β-D-glucose & vice versa. • at any time, only a small amount of open chain forms. CH2OH CH2OH O OH H O OH OH OH OH a-D-glucose (36%) CH2OH O O C OH H OH D-glucose (open) (trace) OH OH OH OH β-D-glucose (64%) 6 Cyclic Structure of Fructose • is a ketohexose. • reacts the -OH on C-5 with the C=O on C-2 CH2OH C O CH2OH HO C H CH2OH O OH H C OH H C OH CH2OH O OH OH OH CH2OH OH OH α-D-fructose b-D-fructose CH2OH D-fructose -OH from C5 attaches to C from C=O! 7 Chemical Properties of Monosaccharides (14.4) 8 Reducing Sugars • are monosaccharides that oxidize to give a carboxylic acid. • undergo reaction in the Benedict’s test. • include the monosaccharides glucose, galactose, and fructose. • many disaccharides can also oxidize • but only if one monosaccharide can ring open! (see later slides) 9 Oxidation of D-Glucose O O C H C OH H C OH HO C H H C OH H C OH [O] 2+ + Cu HO C H H C OH H C OH H C OH CH2OH CH2OH D-glucose + Cu2O(s) D-gluconic acid QUESTION: WHY CAN FRUCTOSE (A KETONE) BE OXIDIZED??? ANSWER: ISOMERIZATION TO AN ALDEHYDE… 10 One Test for Glucose in Urine: Benedict’s Test 11 Reduction of Monosaccharides • involves the carbonyl group. • produces sugar alcohols, or alditols. • such as Dglucose gives D-glucitol also called sorbitol. D-Glucitol 12 Learning Check Write the products of the oxidation and reduction of D-mannose. O C H HO H HO H H OH H OH CH2OH D-mannose 13 Solution CH2OH HO H HO H Reduction O O C H C OH HO H HO H Oxidation HO H HO H H OH H OH H OH H OH H OH H OH CH2OH D-mannitol CH2OH CH2OH D-mannose D-mannonic acid 14 Disaccharides (14.5) 15 Important Disaccharides: Know These 3 A disaccharide consists of two monosaccharides. Monosaccharides Disaccharide glucose + glucose maltose + H2O glucose + galactose lactose + H2O glucose + fructose sucrose + H2O 16 Maltose Free α-OH A.K.A. “malt sugar” obtained from starch hydrolysis used in cereals, candies, and brewing linked by an a-1,4glycosidic bond formed from the a −OH on C1 of the 1st glucose and −OH on C4 of the 2nd glucose found in both the aand β - forms 17 Lactose • a disaccharide of β-D-galactose and α- or β-Dglucose. • contains a β -1,4glycosidic bond. • is found in milk and milk products. α-form α-form 18 Sucrose Sucrose or table sugar • is obtained from sugar cane and sugar beets. • consists of α-D-glucose and β-D-fructose. • has an α,β-1,2-glycosidic bond. α-D-glucose β -D-fructose Is a non-reducing sugar. Why? 19 Learning Check Write the structures of the two monosaccharides that form when sucrose is hydrolyzed. 20 Solution 21 Polysaccharides • often polymers of D-glucose. • include amylose & amylopectin, starches made of α-D-glucose. • include glycogen (animal starch in muscle), which is made of αD-glucose. • include cellulose (plants and wood), which is made of β-Dglucose. CH2OH O OH OH OH OH α-D-Glucose 22 Starch: Structures of Amylose & Amylopectin 23 Amylose • a polymer of α-Dglucose molecules. • linked by a-1,4 glycosidic bonds. • a continuous (unbranched) chain. 24 Amylopectin • also a polymer of α-D-glucose molecules. • is a branched-chain polysaccharide. • has α-1,4glycosidic bonds between the glucose units. • has α-1,6 bonds to branches. 25 Glycogen • is the polysaccharide that stores α-Dglucose in muscle. • is similar to amylopectin, but is more highly branched. 26 Cellulose • a polysaccharide of glucose units in unbranched chains. • has β-1,4-glycosidic bonds. • cannot be digested by humans because humans cannot break down β-1,4glycosidic bonds. 27 Learning Check Identify the polysaccharides and types of glycosidic bonds in each of the following. A. B. C. 28 Solution A. Cellulose b-1,4-glycosidic bonds B. Amylose Amylopectin a-1,4-glycosidic bonds a-1,4-and a-1,6-glycosidic bonds C. Glycogen a-1,4-and a-1,6-glycosidic bonds (more branched than amylopectin) 29 Other cool sugars… Chitin (glucose w/ amide) = insect exoskeleton. Similar to that in bacterial cell wall; makes bacterial cells hard to break open. Lysozyme – defense protein to break down cell walls Cell surface, including ABO blood groups. 30 You are responsible for the Health Note on Page 485! 31 More Interesting Info: Sweetness of Sweeteners • Sugars differ in sweetness. • are compared to sucrose (table sugar), which is assigned a value of 100. 60 000 32 History of Artificial Sweeteners Saccharin: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saccharin 1879 Ira Remsen and Constantin Fahlberg at JHU Monsanto Chemical Company in Saint Louis became profitable in manufacturing and selling saccharin. Aspartame (Nutrasweet) was originally patented by GD Searle in Chicago. 1985 Monsanto bought GD Searle and created the NutraSweet Company. Neotame (an analog of Aspartame) is 5 times sweeter than Aspartame. See http://www.neotame.com/ 33 Chapter 15: Lipids… mmm…Fat… 15.1 Lipids 15.2 Fatty Acids 34