Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
School of Biotechnology Vignan University, Vadlamudi Carbohydrates Monosaccharide Disaccharides SWEET SWEET FRUIT (GRAPES) FRUIT (SUGARCANE) Polysaccharides DO NOT TASTE SWEET PLANT FUNCTIONS • Structural – cellulose, chitin, peptidoglycan • Energy storage – starch, glycogen • Biologically active: – Transport – glycoproteins in plasma (transferring) – Regulatory – glycoproteins like FSH, LH, TSH – Catalytic – glycoproteins (ribonuclease, -amylase) – Immune response – Ig, interferons, Rh factors – Cell lubrication & supportive function – sialoglycoproteins – Cell differentiation – ABO blood grouping – Cell membrane, clotting factors, & protective cellular coat proteins – glycocalyx, fibrinogen, prothrombin INTRODUCTION Carbohydrates are an important source of energy that can be use by cells. From the word Carbohydrates, “carbo” refer to element Carbon “hydrates” refer to water (H2O) Containing of Carbon, Hydrogen, and Oxygen. The ratio of hydrogen atoms to oxygen atoms in one molecule of carbohydrates is 2 : 1. The empirical formula = Cm(H2O)n General characteristics • Carbohydrates are molecules in nature. the most abundant organic • In plants, glucose is synthesized from carbon dioxide and water by photosynthesis and stored as starch or is converted to cellulose of the plant framework. • Carbohydrates perform both structural and metabolic roles. • Carbohydrates are Poly-hydroxy-aldehydes, hydroxy-ketones, or their polymers • Carbohydrates are also named saccharides Latin, or poly- Important biological Functions of Carbohydrates 1. Source of energy (Metabolic fuel: glucose) 2. Storage of energy as starch (in plants) and glycogen (in animals) 3. Form structural tissues in plants (cellulose), in bacteria (cell-wall), and animals: proteoglycans in cartilage, teeth .. 4. Found in plasma membrane and play a role in cell recognition 5. Glucose can be converted into fats and proteins 6. Ribose sugar is important in the formation of nucleic acids (RNA and DNA) Classification of Carbohydrates • 1- Monosaccharides: formed of one sugar unit Ex: Glucose, Ribose, Galactose, Fructose, Mannose • 2- Disaccharides: formed of two sugar units Ex: Maltose , Sucrose , Lactose • 3- Oligosaccharides: formed of 3 – 12 sugar units • 4- Polysaccharides (glycans): formed of more than 12 sugar units • Homopolysaccharides: Starch, Glycogen, Cellulose • Heteropolysaccharides: Chondroitin sulfate, Heparin Types of Carbohydrate • Monosaccharides • Disaccharides • Polysaccharides MONOSACCHARIDES It is monomer of carbohydrates. known as simple sugar. main source of energy for many cells. glucose can be found in plants and fruits fructose can be found in sweet fruit and honey galactose can be found in milk C6H12O6 Characteristic of monosaccharides Taste sweet. Able to crystallize Water soluble Simplest carbohydrates. Reducing sugar when heated with Benedict’s solution, monosaccharides reduce the blue copper (II) sulphate solution to a brick-red precipitate, copper (I) oxide. Monosaccharides are reducing sugars. carbon Elements oxygen Glucose hydrogen Fructose Galactose Monosaccharide Maltose Types Sucrose Disaccharide Lactose Starch Polysaccharide Cellulose Glycogen Condensation + + H2O Reaction Hydrolysis + H2O + Monosaccharides General formula: (CH2O)n Smallest has 3 carbons e.g. glyceraldehyde CLASSIFICATION OF MONSACCHARIDES: Can be carried out by one of two methods: 1. According to the number of carbon atoms: • 1- Trioses : Contain 3 carbon atoms. e.g. Glyceraldehyde - Dihydroxy Acetone (DHA) • 2- Tetroses : Contain 4 carbon atoms. e.g. Erythrose • 3- Pentoses: Contain 5 carbon atoms. e.g. Ribose - Xylulose • 4- Hexoses : Contain 6 carbon atoms. e.g. 12 Glucose - Galactose – Mannose - Fructose CLASSIFICATION OF MONSACCHARIDES 2. According to the characteristic carbonyl group (aldehyde or ketone group): A-Aldoses: monosacchrides containing aldehyde group e.g. Glucose, galactose, ribose, and glyceraldehyde B- Ketoses: monosaccharides containing ketone group e.g. Fructose, ribulose and dihydroxy acetone • • • Sometimes Combination of 1 and 2 e.g. Glucose is Aldohexose: a six-carbon monosaccharide (hexose) containing an aldehyde group (Aldose). Fructose is Ketohexose: a six-carbon monosaccharide (hexose) containing a ketone group (Ketose). 13 Monosaccharides •Classification according to the characteristic carbonyl group 14 Monosaccharides •The simplest aldose is glyceraldehyde. •The simplest ketose is dihydroxyacetone. •They are constitutional isomers of each other, sharing the formula C3H6O3. 15 H C O CH2OH H C OH C O HO C H HO C H H C OH H C OH H C OH H C OH CH2OH CH2OH Glucose (an Aldose) Fructose (a Ketose) 16 1 O 1 O 1 C H 2 H C OH C H C H C H H 2C OH H 2C OH H 3C OH 1 O H 3C OH 3CH OH 2 4CH OH 2 D- Glyceraldehdye D-Erythrose H 4C O OH 5 CH2OH D-Ribose H 2C OH HO 3C H H 4C OH 5 H C OH 6 CH2OH D-Glucose Examples of Aldoses of physiologic significance 17 1 1 CH2OH 1CH OH 2 2C O O H 3 C OH H 3C OH H 4C OH 2C 4 5 CH2OH D-Erythrulose CH2OH D-Ribulose 1 CH2OH CH2OH 2C O HO 3 C H H 4C OH 5 CH2OH D-Xylulose 2C O HO 3 C H H 4C OH H 5 C OH 6 CH2OH D-Fructose Examples of Ketoses of physiologic significance 18 •Glucose is the most important sugar for living organisms. •It has one carbonyl group (aldehyde) and five hydroxy groups (Alcohol). The OH groups can be distributed either at the right side (D; 2,4,5,6) or left side (L; 3). Glucose is named as D or L according to the orientation of C-5 •In reality, C1 (CHO) and C5 (OH) react together so that glucose forms a ring. OH at the right side becomes down (alpha = ) and that on the left becomes up (beta = b) O H C H C OH HO C H H C OH H C OH 1 CH2OH D-Glucose 6 6 -D-Glucose -D-Glucose (-D-Glucopyranose) b 1 b-D-Glucose (b-D-Glucopyranose) 19 Fischer Projection Haworth Projection BIOMEDICALLY, GLUCOSE IS THE MOST IMPORTANT MONOSACCHARIDE α-D-glucose chair form Straight chain form α-D-glucose Haworth projection Fischer projection formulas Pyranose and Furanose forms of Glucose Glucose in solution, more than 99% is in the pyranose form 20 Monosaccharides have a aldehyde/ketone and an alcohol in the same molecule In the same molecule, so it forms an intramolecular hemiacetal linkage 21 Haworth Formula of Sugars 6 CH2 OH O O 5 H H HO 4 HO O 3 OH 2 OH -D- Glucopyranose 6 1 CH2OH O 5 H H 4 HO Furan ring 1 H H Pyran ring H OH CH2 OH 2 OH 3 H -D-Fructofuranose 22 Pyranose Furanose 23 Anomerism •C-1 in the cyclic structure is called anomeric carbon atom. •It is asymmetric C atom. •If the –OH at C-1 (the anomeric carbon) is to the right it is called -Form. •If the –OH at C-1 is to the left it is called bform. 24 Anomerism H 1 C 1 2 3 HO C H H 4 5 H C OH O 3 HO C H C OH H C H 6 - D-Glucose CH2OH C 2 H C OH H H HO OH 4 5 O C OH C 6 CH2OH b- D-Glucose 25 - and b- forms of sugars are called anomers (a type of stereoisomerism) Isomerism • Isomers are chemical compounds having the same molecular formula but different structural or stereochemical formula. • Functional group isomerism (e.g. Aldose Ketose isomerism): Glucose and Fructose are aldose-ketose isomers • Also, Glyceraldehyde and Dihydroxyaxetone are aldose-ketose 26 isomers Glycosidic Bond • Glycosides are formed by reaction between hemiacetal or hemiketal hydroxyl group of carbohydrate react with hydroxyl group of another carbohydrate or noncarbohydrate alcohol group. The bond formed is known as glycosidic bond How glucose molecules join together Two glucose molecules are linked by a condensation reaction. this results in the formation of a disaccharide called maltose. The two monosaccharides are linked by a glycosidic bond (c-o-c ) and the molecules share an oxygen atom. During the condensation reaction water is formed. Disaccharides • Disaccharides are made up of two monosaccharide of same unit or different • 1 Maltose ----- Glucose + Glucose Maltose Characteristic malt flavour End product of enzymatic degradation of starch & glycogen by amylase Shows mutarotation, fermentable, water soluble • Lactose ---------Glucose+Galactose Lactose Characteristic of milk – 4.4-5.2 % D-glucose+D-galactose Hydrolyzed by latase & strong acids • Sucrose ----------Glucose + Fructose Disaccharides sucrose lactose Polysaccharides • Polysaccharides are polymer of monosaccharides of same type or different type • Classification according to biological role: – Storage polysaccharides (starch, glycogen) – Structural polysaccharides (cellulose, chitin) • Classification according to no of types of monosaccharides: – homoglycans / heteroglycans Polysaccharides • They do not have sweet taste • They are amorphous substance insoluble in water • They have high molecular weight • They form colloidal solutions when heated with water • they don not exhibit any of the properties of aldehyde or keto groups Homopolysaccharides They contain monosaccharides units of a single type e.g Glycogen, starch, cellulose, chitin The polymer of α-glucose is starch The polymer of β-glucose is cellulose Polysaccharides • Heteopolysaccharides They possess two or more types monosaccharides units or their derivatives e.g Heparin, Chondroitin, Hyaluronic acid Polysaccharides Cellulose • it is a non sugar and homopolysaccharide since only it is composed of glucose units • it is not easily hydrolyzed . It is hydrolyzed to glucose by conc. H2So4 or NaOH • it is main constituent of cell walls of plants • it occurs in lignin and cotton • its mol. wt. ranges from 2,00,000 to 20,00,000 Da • it contains 1,200 to 12,500 glucose units per molecules • Glucose units are linked by β1,4glycosidic bond. • It is not nutritive because of its inertness towards chemical reaction • Cellulose is not digested by man • Ruminants like cattle, sheep, goats, camel and certain wood eating insects able to digest cellulose due to presence of cellulase enzyme in their digestive tract Cellulose • Forms chains which run parallel with hydrogen bonds between the chains to form microfibrils • Microfibrils are strong • Being fibrous, cellulose is structurally important in plant cell walls Cellulose • Polymer of β-glucose • Each monomer is inverted. • Has consequences for its properties Starch. • It is a homopolysaccharide. • It is a non-sugar • It yields glucose on complete hydrolysis. So it is a glucan. • It is the main storage material in plants. starch is insoluble and compact , but it is easily available for use by the plant. • It is a white amorphous, tasteless and soft substance. • it is made up of glucose units. The glucose units are arranged in the form of branched and un branche chains. • The glucose units are linked by α-1, 4-glycosidic linkages and branches are formed by α-1, 6-glycosidic bond. • Starch consists of two compounds: 1. Amylose (20%) –this is made up of a single chain of α glucose molecules that form spirals. 2. Amylopectin (80%) - this is made up of branched chains of α glucose. Structure of starch Starch α-Amylose Amylose • it is a homopolysaccharide with a Mol. Wt. ranging from 10,000 to 50,000 Da • It is a water soluble. • It has a long unbranched straight chain – made up of glucose units. • the amylose chain is in the form of helix; each turn has 6 glucose units. • the enzyme amylase converts amylose into maltose. • it gives intense blue colour with iodine Amylopectin • it is a homopolysaccharide with high Mol. Wt. • It is insoluble in water. • It is a branched chain – made up of glucose units (2,000 to 2,00,000 units). • It gives isomaltose during hydrolysis. • it gives purple colour with iodine Amylopectin. Glycogen. • Glycogen is the main storage carbohydrate in animals. • It has a similar structure to amylopectin, but it has more branches. • It structure allows it to be quickly built up or broken down , matching the animals needs. •Glycogen is a homopolysaccharide since it gives glucose on complete hydrolysis. It is a glucan. • It is the major reserve carbohydrate in animals. So it is called as ANIMAL STARCH. •It is stored mainly in the liver and muscles of animals. Among plants it is found in fungi and yeast which are devoid of chlorophyll. •It is a white powder. It readily dissolves in water. •It gives red colour with iodine. •It is a branched polymer of glucose with α-1,4and α-1,6 types of linkages. •The straight chain contains α-1,4- glycosidic bond. The point of branching contains 1,6- glycosidic bond. •It is a non reducing sugar. It gives red colour with iodine. The red colour disappears on boiling and reappears on cooling. •The liver glycogen supplies glucose to all tissues through the blood. •The blood always contains 1% glucose. When it exceeds 1%,the excess glucose is transported to the liver and is converted into glycogen. •When blood sugar level is below 1% the liver glycogen is changed into blood glucose. •Muscle glycogen is utilized as the energy source during muscle contraction. •Glycogen resembles amylopectin of starch chemically but differs from it in molecular weight and degree of branching. CHITIN •Chitin is an important polysaccharide of invertebrates. •It is formed of many units of N-ACETYL GLUCOSAMINE linked by β-1,4- linkage. •It is related to cellulose. The alcoholic OH group on carbon atom 2 of β-D-glucose units is replaced by Nacetylamino group. •It is found in the exoskeleton of insects and crustaceans and in the cell walls of fungi. •On hydrolysis with mineral acids it gives glucosamine and acetic acid. •Chitin is decomposed to N-acetyl glucosamine by CHITINASE present in the gastric juice of snails or from bacteria. DEXTRIN •Dextrins are a group of low-molecularweight carbohydrates produced by the hydrolysis of starch[1] or glycogen.[2] Dextrins are mixtures of polymers of D-glucose units linked by α(1→4) or α-(1→6) glycosidic bonds. •Dextrins can be produced from starch using enzymes like amylases, as during digestion in the human body and during malting andmashing,[3] or by applying dry heat under acidic conditions (pyrolysis or roasting). •Used industrially on the surface of bread during the baking process, contributing to flavor, color, and crispness. Dextrins produced by heat are also known as pyrodextrins. • Dextrins are white, yellow, or brown powders that are partially or fully water-soluble, yielding optically active solutions of low viscosity. Most can be detected with iodine solution, giving a red coloration; one distinguishes erythrodextrin (dextrin that colours red) and achrodextrin (giving no colour). •White and yellow dextrins from starch roasted with little or no acid is called British gum. •Sephadex is a trademark for cross-linked dextran gel used for gel filtration. • It is normally manufactured in a bead form and most commonly used for gel filtration columns. By varying the degree of cross-linking, the fractionation properties of the gel can be altered. •These highly specialized gel filtration and chromatographic media are composed of macroscopic beads synthetically derived from the polysaccharide, dextran. The organic chains are cross-linked to give a threedimensional network having functional ionic groups attached by ether linkages to glucose units of the polysaccharide chains. GLYCOPROTEINS • Glycoproteins are proteins that contain oligosaccharide chains (glycans) covalently attached to polypeptide sidechains. • The carbohydrate is attached to the protein in a cotranslational or post-translational modification. • This process is known as glycosylation. Secreted extracellular proteins are often glycosylated. • Glycoproteins are often important integral membrane proteins, where they play a role in cell– cell interactions. There are two types of glycosylation: • In N-glycosylation, the addition of sugar chains can happen at the amide nitrogen on the side-chain of the asparagine. • In O-glycosylation, the addition of sugar chains can happen on the hydroxyl oxygen on the side-chain of hydroxylysine, hydroxyproline, serine, or threonine • Glycoproteins are important for white blood cell recognition, especially in mammals. • molecules such as antibodies (immunoglobulins), which interact directly with antigens are glycoproteins. • molecules of the major histocompatibility complex (or MHC), which are expressed on the surface of cells and interact with T cells as part of the adaptive immune response. • glycoprotein IIb/IIIa, an integrin found on platelets that is required for normal platelet aggregation and adherence to the endothelium. • components of the zona pellucida, which surrounds the oocyte, and is important for sperm-egg interaction. GLYCOSAMINOGLYCANS • Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are long unbranched polysaccharides consisting of a repeating disaccharide unit. • The repeating unit consists of an amino sugar (Nacetylglucosamine or N-acetylgalactosamine) along with a uronic sugar (glucuronic acid or iduronic acid) or galactose. • Glycosaminoglycans are highly polar and attract water. • They are therefore useful to the body as a lubricant or as a shock absorber. 2. Glycosaminoglycans CHONDROTIN – 4- SULPHATE • In chondratin – 4 – sulphate the two repeating monosaccharide derivatives are GlcA & GALNAC6S. • It contributes to the tensile strength of cartilage, tendons and ligaments. HEPARIN • Heparin is a natutal coagulant that is prepared in mast cells and then released into blood. • It inhibits blood coagulation by binding to the protein anti- thrombin. • Purified heparin is added to blood samples obtained for clinical analysis and to the blood. LECTINS Lectins are carbohydrate-binding proteins, macromolecules that are highly specific for sugar moieties. Lectins should neither be confused with glycoproteins (proteins containing sugar chains or residues), lecithins (fatty substances in animals and plants), nor leptin (the regulator of appetite and hunger, metabolism, and behavior). Long before a deeper understanding of their numerous biological functions, the plant lectins, also known as phytohemagglutinins, were noted for their particular high specificity for foreign glycoconjugates (e.g. those of fungi, invertebrates, and animals).[1] and used in biomedicine for blood cell testing and in biochemistry for fractionation. Lectins perform recognition on the cellular and molecular level and play numerous roles in biological recognition phenomena involving cells, carbohydrates, and proteins. Lectins also mediate attachment and binding of bacteria and viruses to their intended targets. For example, it is hypothesized that some hepatitis C viral glycoproteins attach to C-type lectins on the host cell surface (liver cells) for infection. Lectins may be disabled by specific mono- and oligosaccharides, which bind to ingested lectins from grains, legume, nightshade plants and dairy; binding can prevent their attachment to the carbohydrates within the cell membrane. Some lectins may be powerful toxins as for instance ricin, and others have been incorporated into genetically engineered crops to transfer traits, such as resistance to pests and resistance to herbicides. Mutarotation • interconversion of α- and β- anomers •The α- and β- anomers of carbohydrates are typically stable solids. •However, in aqueous solution, they quickly equilibrate to an equilibrium mixture of the two forms. •For example, in aqueous solution, glucose exists as a mixture of 36% α- and 64% β- (>99% of the pyranose forms exist in solution).