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Biochemistry Chapter 7 Carbohydrates Biochemical Substances biochemistry - study of the chemical substances found in living organisms and the chemical interactions of these substances with each other biochemical substance - chemical substance found within a living organism - divided into two groups: i) bioinorganic substances - includes water and inorganic salts ii) bioorganic substances - includes carbohydrates, lipids, proteins and nucleic acids Occurrence and Functions of Carbohydrates carbohydrates - most abundant class of bioinorganic molecules on planet - abundance in human body relatively low, yet carbohydrates constitute about 75% by mass of dry plant materials - green (chlorophyll-containing) plants produce carbohydrates via photosynthesis Chlorophyll CO2 + H2O + solar energy carbohydrates + O2 Plant enzymes Fig. 7.1 (p.221) Mass consumption data for the human body in terms of major types of biochemical substances. Plants have two main uses for carbohydrates they produce: i) in form of cellulose - carbohydrates serve as structural elements ii) in form of starch - provide energy reserves for plants - dietary intake of plant materials is major carbohydrate source for humans and animals - Carbohydrates have following functions in humans: 1) carbohydrate oxidation provides energy 2) carbohydrate storage, in form of glycogen, provides shortterm energy reserve 3) carbohydrates supply carbon atoms for synthesis of other biochemical substances (proteins, lipids and nucleic acids) 4) carbohydrates form part of structural framework of DNA and RNA molecules 5) carbohydrates linked to lipids and structural components of cell membranes 6) carbohydrates linked to proteins function in variety of cell-cell and cell-molecule recognition processes Classification of Carbohydrates - simple carbohydrates have empirical formula that fits general formula CnH2nOn [may see this written as Cn(H2O)n] Carbohydrate - a polyhydroxy aldehyde, a polyhydroxy ketone, or a cmpd that yields polyhydroxy aldehydes or ketones upon hydrolysis Note: carbohydrates have large number of functional groups 1 Classified on basis of molecular size: i) Monosaccharide - carbohydrate that contains single polyhydroxy aldehyde or polyhydroxy ketone unit - cannot be broken down into simpler units by hydrolysis - naturally occurring monosaccharides have 3-7 C atoms with 5-6 C species being most common - pure monosaccharides are water-soluble, white, crystalline solids ii) Oligosaccharide - carbohydrate containing 2-10 monosaccharide units covalently bonded to each other - most common are disaccharides - types of carbohydrates are related to each other through hydrolysis: polysaccharides hydrolysis disaccharide - carbohydrate that contains two monosaccharide units covalently bonded to each other - crystalline, water-soluble substances Note: oligosaccharides often found associated with proteins and lipids in complexes that have both structural and regulatory functions - free oligosaccharides, other than disaccharides, seldom encountered in biochemical systems - complete hydrolysis of oligosaccharides produces monosaccharides iii) Polysaccharide - polymeric carbohydrate that contains many monosaccharide units covalently bonded to each other Chirality: Handed in Molecules - most monosaccharides have important general property called handedness - exist in two forms: left-hand form and right-hand form which are related to one another as mirror images oligosaccharides Fig. 7.3 (p.223) The mirror image of the right hand is the left hand. Conversely, the mirror image of the left hand is the right hand. hydrolysis monosaccharides mirror image - the reflection of an object in a mirror Objects divided into two classes on basis of mirror image: i) objects with superimposable mirror images - images that coincide at all points when the images are laid upon each other ii) objects with nonsuperimposable mirror images - images where not all points coincides when the images are laid upon each other Fig. 7.4 (p. 223) A person s left and right hands are not superimposable upon each other. Chirality - What is the molecular structural feature that generates handedness ? - any organic molecule that contains a C atom with four different group attached to it in a tetrahedral orientation possesses handedness or has a chiral center chiral center - an atom in a molecule that has four different group tetrahedrally bonded to it chiral molecule - molecule whose mirror images are not superimposable - contains a chiral center and has handedness achiral molecule - molecule whose mirror images are superimposable - do not possess handedness 2 Chirality bromochloroiodomethane glyceraldehyde Why is handedness important? - in human body chemistry, right-handed and left-handed form of molecule often elicit different responses with in body Possibilities: i) sometimes both are biologically active, each form giving different response ii) sometimes both elicit same response but one form s responses is many times greater than that of the other iii) sometimes only one of two forms is biochemically active Fig. 7.5 (p.224) Examples of simple molecules that are chiral. Stereoiosmerism: Enantiomers and Diastereomers - left- and right-handed forms of chiral molecules are isomers stereoisomers - isomers that have same molecular and structural formulas but differ in the orientation of atoms in space - structural features that generate stereoisomerism: 1) presence of a chiral center in a molecule 2) presence of structural rigidity in a molecule - caused by restricted rotation about chemical bonds Two types of stereoisomers: i) enantiomers - stereoisomers whose molecules are nonsuperimposable mirror images of each other ii) diastereomers - stereoisomers whose molecules are not mirror images of each other Stereoisomerism Fig. 7.7 (p.226) The thought process used in classifying molecules as enantiomers or diastereomers. Stereoisomerism Fig. 7.6 (p.226) Enantiomers are stereoisomers whose molecules are nonsuperimposable mirror images of each other. Designating Handedness Using Fischer Projections Fischer projection - a two-dimensional structural notation for showing the spatial arrangement of groups about chiral centers in molecules - chiral center represented as intersection of vertical and horizontal lines - atom at chiral center, which is almost always C, is not explicitly shown - tetrahedral arrangement of four groups attached to atom a chiral center is governed by the following conventions: 1) vertical line from chiral center represent bonds to groups directed into the printed page 2) horizontal lines from chiral cetner represent bonds to groups directed out of printed page 3 - for monosaccharides, carbon chain positioned vertically with carbonyl group (aldehyde or ketone) at or near top Consider glyceraldehyde: - two enantiomers with handedness (left or right) specified using D and L i) enantiomer with chiral center OH group on right is defined as the right-handed isomer (designated D from Latin dextro which means right ) ii) enantiomer with chiral center OH group on left is defined as the left-handed isomer (designated L from Latin levo which means left ) Properties of Enantiomers Constitutional isomers - differ in most chemical & physical properties Diastereomers - differ is most chemical and physical properties Enantiomers - nearly all properties are the same - exhibit different properties in only two areas: i) interaction with plane-polarized light ii) interaction with other chiral molecules Plane-polarized light Fig. 7.10 (p.232) Instruments used to measure degree to rotation of plane-polarized light by enantiomeric cmpds are called polarimeters. Schematic depiction of how a polarimeter works. Fig. 7.9 (p.232) Vibrational characteristics of ordinary and polarized light. Carbohydrates Constitutional isomerism and stereoisomerism (p.231) Enantiomers and plane-polarized light - ordinary light waves (unpolarized light waves) vibrate in all planes at right angles to their direction of travel - plane-polarized light waves, vibrate in only one plane at right angles to their direction of travel - ordinary light converted to plane-polarized light by passing it through polarizer - when plane-polarized light passed through sol n containing single enantiomer , plane of polarized light is rotated counterclockwise (left) or clockwise (right) depending on enantiomer - extent of rotation depends on concentration of enatiomer and its identity - the two enantiomers of pair rotate plane-polarized light same number of degrees, but in opposite directions Dextrorotatory and Levorotatory optically active cmpds - cmpds that rotate the plane of polarized light (includes enantiomers) Note: achiral molecules optically inactive chiral molecules optically active dextrorotatory cmpd; (+) (Latin dextro means right ) - chiral cmpd that rotates the plane of polarized light in clockwise direction levorotatory cmpd; (-) (Latin levo means left ) - chiral cmpd that rotates the plane of polarized light in counterclockwise direction Note: - if one member of enantiomeric pair is dextrorotatory, the other member must be levorotatory (optical isomers) - handedness of enantiomers (D or L) and direction of rotation of plane-polarized light by enantiomers (+ or -) are not connected 4 Interactions between Chiral Compounds Two members of an enantiomeric pair have same interactions with achiral molecules and different interactions with chiral molecules Observations: 1) Enantiomers have identical boiling points, freezing points, and densities b/c these properties depend on strength of intermolecular forces (which does not depend on chirality). Intermolecular forces are same for both forms of chiral molecule b/c both forms have identical sets of functional groups 2) Pair of enantiomers have same solubility in achiral solvent but differing solubilities in chiral solvent 3) Rate and extent of rxn of enantiomers with another reactant are same if reactant is achiral but differ if reactant is chiral 4) Receptor sites for molecules within body have chirality associated with them. Enantiomers always generate different responses with human body as they interact at such sites. Interactions between Chiral Compounds Fig. 7.12 (p. 233) Epinephrine binds to the receptor at three points. - monosaccharides often called sugars - hexoses are 6-carbon sugars, pentoses are 5-carbon sugars, etc. Note: sugar general designation for either monosaccharide or disaccharide - associated with sweetness with most monosaccharides (but not all) and many disaccharides (but not all) having sweet taste - trioses are smallest monosaccharides that can exist: i) one is an aldose (glyceraldehyde) reference cmpds for all ii) one is a ketose (dihydroxyacetone) ketoses and aldoses Note: major difference btw these two substances is that dihydroxyacetone does not posses a chiral carbon; this means that D and L forms are not possible - ie. ketotetroses, ketopentoses and ketohexoses have half the number of possible stereoisomers Chiral-chiral interactions involving enantiomers in human body: 1) Taste perception - distinctly different natural flavors of spearment (Lcarvone) and caraway (D-carvone) are generated by molecules that are enantiomers interacting with chiral taste receptors 2) body s response to hormone epinephrine (adrenaline) - response to D isomer is 20X greater than response to L isomer - binding of D- epinephrine to cellular receptor site yields a perfect 3-point contact yet L-epinephrine yields only a 2-point contact - poorer fitting of L isomer lends a poorer physiological response Classification of Monosaccharides - no limit to number of C atoms in monosaccharide, but only monosaccharides with 3 to 7 C atoms are commonly found in nature triose 3-carbon monosaccharide tetrose 4-carbon monosaccharide pentose 5-carbon monosaccharide hexose 6-carbon monosaccharide Classification of monosaccharides - classified by both their number of C atoms and their functional group i) aldose - monosaccharide that contains a aldehyde functional group ii) ketose - monosaccharide that contains a ketone functional group D-Aldoses Fig. 7.13 (p. 236) Fischer projections and common names for Daldoses three, four, five, and six carbon atoms. 5 Fig 7.13 - number of possible aldoses doubles each time additional carbon atom is added since new carbon atom is chiral center - chiral center farthest from aldehyde group determines D or L designation for aldose - configurations about other chiral centers present are accounted for by assigning a different common name to each set of D and L enantiomers Note: only D-isomers shown in Fig 7.13; L isomers are mirror images Fig. 7.14 - projection formulas and common names of D forms of ketoses Biochemically Important Monosaccharides - all are white, water-soluble,crystalline solids 1 & 2) D- Glyceraldehyde and Dihydroxyacetone - simplest monosaccharides - important intermediates in process of glycolysis glycolysis series of rxns whereby glucose is converted into two molecules of pyruvate 3) D-Glucose - most abundant monosaccharide in nature and most imp. from human nutritional standpoint - good source ripe fruit - other names: dextrose emphasizes optical activity of d-glucose (rotation to right) blood sugar - emphasizes that blood contains dissolved glucose which is used as cells primary energy source 5) D-Fructose - most important ketohexose - rotate plane-polarized light to left (levolose) - sweetest-tasting of all sugars fruits and honey - may be used as dietary sugar (less needed for same amount of sweetness 6) D-Ribose - pentose - component of variety of complex molecules, including ribonucleic acids (RNAs) and energy-rich cmpds adenosine triphosphate (ATP) - cmpd 2-Deoxy-D-ribose also important in nucleic acid chemistry (component of DNA molecules) Note: deoxy means minus an oxygen - so, structure of ribose and 2-deoxy-ribose differ in that 2-deoxyribose lacks O atom at C-2 D-Ketoses Fig. 7.14 (p.237) Fischer projections and common names for ketoses containing three, four, five, and six carbon atoms. 4) D-Galactose - seldom encountered as free monosaccharide - is component in numerous important biological substances - synthesized from glucose in mammary glands for use in lactose (milk sugar); lactose disaccharide consisting of glucose unit and galactose unit - brain sugar is component of glycoproteins found in brain and nerve tissue - also present in chemical markers that distinguish various types of blood A, B, AB and O Fig. 18.15 A 5% glucose solution is often used in hospitals as an intravenous source of nourishment for patients. Cyclic Forms of Monosaccharides - experimentally, monosaccharides containing 5- or more C atoms are in equilibrium with open-chain structures and two cyclic structures with cyclic forms being dominant @ equilibrium - cyclic form (cyclic hemiacetal) results from ability of carbonyl group to react intramolecularly with hydroxyl group 6 Cyclization of D-Glucose Fig. 7.16 (p.239) The cyclic hemiacetal forms of D-glucose result from the intramolecular reaction between the carbonyl group and the hydroxyl group on carbon 5. Important points of figure 7.16 Stucture 2 - rearrangement of projection formula for D-glucose with C atoms have locations similar to those found for carbon atoms in 6 membered rings - all hydroxyl groups to right in Fischer projection appear below ring - those to left in Fischer projection appear above ring Structure 3 - rotate groups attached to C-5 in counterclockwise direction to visualize intramolecular hemiacetal formation - intramolecular rxn occurs btw OH on C-5 and carbonyl group (C-1) - OH adds across C=O bond, producing heterocyclic ring containing 5 C atoms and one oxygen atom - results in production of ring formation with chiral center at C-1 and the formation of two stereoisomers differing in orientation of OH group on hemiacetal C atom (carbon 1) in glucose: i) -D-Glucose - OH group on opposite side of ring from CH2OH group attached to C-5 ii) -D-Glucose - OH group and CH2OH group are on the same side of the ring - in aqueous sol n, dynamic equilibrium exists among cyclic and open-chain structures with the following distribution: -D-Glucose open-chain D Glucose -D-Glucose (37%) (less than 0.01%) (63%) - all aldoses with 5- or more C atoms establish similar equilibria but with different distribution btw cyclic and open-chain forms - fructose and other ketoses will cyclize as well Haworth Projection Formulas - where or configuration does not matter, -OH group on C-1 is placed in horizontal position, and wavy line is used as bond that connects to ring - the specific identity of monosaccharide is determined by positioning of other OH group in Haworth projection - any OH group at chiral center to right in Fischer projection points down in Haworth projection - any OH group at chiral center to left in Fischer projection points up in Haworth projection Reactions of Monosaccharides Haworth projection - two-dimensional structural notation that specifies the threedimensional structure of a cyclic form of a monosaccharide - the hemiacetal ring system is viewed edge-on with oxygen ring atom at upper right (6-membered ring) or at top (5membered ring) - D and L form of monosaccharide determined by position of terminal CH2OH group on highest-numbered ring carbon atom D form CH2OH group positioned above ring L form CH2OH group positioned below ring - not usually found in biochemical systems - - or - configuration determined by position of OH group on C-1 relative to CH2OH group that determines D or L -configuration both groups in same direction -configuration two groups in opposite directions - five important reactions will be presented with glucose as our example, but with realization that other aldoses and ketoses undergo similar rxns 1) Oxidation to produce acidic sugars - redox chemistry of monosaccharides closely linked to that of alcohol and aldehyde functional groups - monosaccharide oxidation can yield 3 different yptes of acidic sugars with oxidizing agent used determining product a) Weak oxidizing agents (Tollen s and Benedict s soln s) - oxidize aldehyde end of aldose to give aldonic acid - b/c aldoses act as reducing agents in these rxns, called reducing sugars Reducing sugar - carbohydrate that gives positive test with Tollen s and Benedict s soln s 7 - Under basic conditions of Tollen s and Benedict s sol ns, ketoses are also reducing sugars - here, ketoses undergo structural rearrangement to produce an aldose which then reacts - therefore, all monosaccharides, both aldoses & ketoses are reducing sugars b) Strong oxidizing agents - can oxidize both ends of monosaccharide at same time to produce Dicarboxylic acid - these polyhydroxy dicarboxylic acids are known as aldaric acids c) Enzyme oxidation of monosaccharides - although difficult in lab, biochemical system enzymes can oxidize 1o alcohols of aldose with oxidation of aldehyde group to yield alduronic acid 3) Glycoside Formation - b/c cyclic forms of monosaccharides are hemiacetals, they react with alcohols to form acetals Glycoside - an acetal formed from a cyclic monosaccharide by replacement of hemiacetal carbon OH group with OR group - glycosides (like hemiacetals from which they are formed (may be either or forms) - glycosides are named by listng alkyl or aryl group attached to oxygen, followed by name of monosaccharide involved, with suffix ide appended to it 5) Amino Sugar Formation - if one of hydroxyl groups of monosaccharide is replaced by amino group produce an amino sugar - naturally occurring amino sugars, amino group replaces C-2 hydroxy group - amino sugars and N- acetyl derivatives are important building blocks of polysaccharides found in cartilage - some N-acetyl derivatives are biochemical markers on red blood cells, which distinguish various blood types 2) Reduction to Produce Sugar Alcohols - carbonyl group in monosaccharide (either aldose or ketose) can be reduced to hydroxyl group using H2 as reducing agent - corresponding polyhydroxy alcohol referred to as sugar alcohol - hexahydroxy alcohols have properties similar to the trihydroxy alcohol glycerol - uses: moisturizing agents in foods and costemics due to great affinity for water - d-sorbitol used as sweetening agent in chewing gum: benefit - bacteria that cause tooth decay cannot use polyalcohols as food sources 4) Phosphate Ester Formation - hydroxyl groups of monosaccharide can react with inorganic oxyacids to from inorganic esters - phosphate esters, formed from phosphoric acid and various monosaccharides, are common eg. consider glucose - specific enzymes catalyze esterification of: i) carbonyl group (C-1) ii) primary alcohol group (C-6) - phosphate esters of glucose are stable in aqueous sol n and play important role in metabolism of carbohydrates Sugar Terminology Chemistry at a Glance (p. 247) 8 Disaccharides disaccharide - carbohydrate in which two monosaccharides are bonded together - reaction is similar to cyclic form of monosaccharide (hemiacetal form) reacting with alcohol to form glycoside (acetal) - here, one of monosaccharide reactants functions as hemiacetal and other as alcohol Glycosidic linkage - bond in disaccharide resulting from rxn btw hemiacetal carbon atom OH group of one monosaccharide and a OH group on the other monosaccharide - always a C-O-C bond in a disaccharide Forms of Maltose Fig. 7.19 (p.248) The three forms of maltose present in aqueous solution. 4) Sucrose - most abundant of all disaccharides and occurs in plant kingdom - produced from juice of sugar cane and sugar beets - D-sucrose is composed of two monosaccharide units of aD-glucose and -D-fructose with a , (1 2) glycosidic linkage - is a nonreducing sugar - no hemiacetal is present in the molecule since the glycosidic linkage invloves the reducing ends of both monosaccharides - exists in only one form Sucrase - enzyme needed to break , (1 2) linkage is present in human body and sucrose is easily digested - hydrolysis (digestion) produces equimolar mixture of glucose and fructose (mixture referred to as invert sugar) Four important disaccharides: **focus on configuration ( or ) at C-1 of reacting monosaccharides that function as hemiacetal 1) Maltose (malt sugar) - produced when polysaccharide starch breaks down: I) in plants as seeds germinate ii) in human during starch digestion - made of two D-glucose units where one must be -D glucose - is reducing sugar - 3 forms: -maltose, maltose, and open-chain form - will undergo hydrolysis, in the presence of acidic conditions or enzyme maltase, to yield two molecules of Dglucose 2) Cellobiose - produced as intermediate in hydrolysis of polysaccharide cellulose - contains two gucose monosaccharide units with the hemiacetal monosaccharide in the configuration, that is a (1 4) linkage - reducing sugar which 3 isomeric forms in aqueous sol n - produces 2 D-glucose molecules upon hydrolysis 3.) Lactose (milk sugar) - two different monosaccharides; -D-galactose and D-glucose joined by (1 4) glycosidic linkage - reducing sugar - major sugar found in mile - can be hydrolyzed by acid or enzyme lactase - Note: that galactose produced in this manner is then converted to glucose by other enzymes General Characteristics of Polysaccharides polysaccharide (often called glycans) - polymer that contains many monosaccharide units bonded to each other by glycosidic linkages - important parameters that distinguish various polysaccharides (glycans) from each other: 1) identity of monosaccharide repeating unit(s) in polymer chain homopolysaccharides polysaccharide in which only one type of monosaccharide monomer is present - most abundant in nature (includes starch, glycogen, cellulose and chitin) heteropolysaccharides - polysaccharide in which more than one (usually two) types of monosaccharide monomers are present - includes hyaluronic acid and heparin 9 2) length of polymer chain - can vary from less than 100 monomers to up to a million monomer units 3) type of glycosidic linkage btw monomer units - several different types of glycosidic linkages are encountered 4) degree of branching of polymer chain - ability to from branched-chain structures distinguishes polysaccharides from each other major types of biochemical polymers Fig. 7.22 (p.251) The polymer chain of a polysaccharide may be unbranched or branched. polysaccharide characteristics - not sweet - not test positive in Tollen s and Benedict s sol ns - limited water solubility (due to size) - however, -OH groups can individually become hydrated by water molecules yielding thick colloidal suspension of polysaccharide in water Focus of certain polysaccharides: i) storage polysaccharides - starch and glycogen ii) structural polysaccharides - cellulose and chitin iii) acidic polysaccharides - hyaluronic acid and heparin Storage polysaccharides - polysaccharides that is a storage form for monosaccharides are used as energy source in cells - this lowers osmotic pressure within cells since osmotic pressure depends on number of individual molecules present i) Starch energy-storage polysaccharide in plant cells - homopolysaccharide containing only glucose monomers - hydrolysis of starch releases glucose - two different polyglucose polysaccharides may be isolated from starches: a) amylose (15-20% of starch) - straight-chain glucose polymer (non-branched) - 1 4) glycosidic linkages - no. of units depending on source of starch; usually btw 300-500 units amylopectin - high degree of branching with branching every 25-30 glucose units where branch point involves 1 6) - linkages- up to 100,000 glucose units - contains 1 4) and 1 6) linkages ii) glycogen (animal starch) storage polysaccharide in humans and animals - liver cells and muscle cells are storage sites in humans - similar structure to amylopectin with glycosidic linkages being 1 4) and 1 6) linkages - however, 3 times as many branches and upto 1,000,000 glucose units - two opposing processes, glycogenesis and glycogenolysis, represent formation and decomposition of glycogen, resp. - formation of glycogen from glucose greatly reduces osmotic cell pressure Structure of Amylopectin Structural Polysaccharides Storage Polysaccharides Fig. 7.23 (p.254) Two perspectives on the structure of the polysaccharide amylopectin. b) - serve as structural element in plant cell walls and animal exoskeletons - both are homopolysaccharides i) cellulose - structural component of cell walls - most abundant naturally-occurring polysaccharide fibrous, water-insoluble substance found in woody portions of plants stems, stalks and trunks - unbranched glucose polymer with 1 4) glycosidic linkages - linear structure which when aligned side by side become water-insoluble fibers due to interchain H-bonding involving many hydroxy groups present 10 - ii) cellulose chains approximately 5000 glucose units making MW of approximately 900,000amu not source of nutrition for humans since lack enzyme for catalyzing hydrolysis of 1 4) linkages grazing animals contain bacteria in intestinal tract that produces cellulase which is the enzyme that can hydrolyze 1 4) linkages and produce free glucose Chitin - polysaccharide similar to cellulose in both function and structure - gives rigidity to exoskeletons of crabs, lobsters, shrimp and other anthropods; also occurs in cell walls of fungi - linear polymer (no branching) with all 1 4) glycosidic linkages - differs from cellulose in that monosaccharide present is N acetyl amino derivative of D-glucose Acidic Polysaccharides - polysaccharides with disaccharide repeating unit in which one of the disaccharide components is an amino sugar and one or both disaccharide components has negative charge due to sulfate group or carboxyl group - heteropolysaccharides two different monosaccharides present in alternating pattern - involved in variety of cellular functions and tissues - unbranched-chain structures i) hyaluronic acid - contains alternating residues of N-acetyl- -D-glucosamine (repeating unit in chitin) and D-glucuronic acid (derived from glucose by oxidation of OH group at C-6 to an acid group) - alternating pattern of glycosidic linkages of 1 3) and 1 4) and 50,000 disaccharide units per chain Common Glycosidic Linkages in Di- and Polysaccharides Chemistry at a Glance (p. 257) Structural Polysaccharides Fig. 7.28 The structures of cellulose (a) chitin (b). b) Heparin - an anticoagulant; helps prevent blood clots - binds strongly to protein involved in terminating process of blood clotting, thus inhibiting blood clotting - small polysaccharide; 15-90 saccharide residues/chain - monosaccharides in disaccharide repeating unit is Dglucuronate-2-sulfate and N-sulfo-D-glucosamine-6sulfate Note: both contain two negatively charged acidic groups Glycolipids and Glycoproteins - oligosaccharides attached through glycosidic linkages to lipid or protein molecules have wide variety of cellular functions including process of cell recognition glycolipids and glycoproteins - often govern how individual cells of differing function within biochemical system recognize each other and how cells interact with invading bacteria and viruses lipid or protein part of glycolipid or glycoprotein is incorporated into cell membrane structure and oligosaccharide part functions as marker on outer cell membrane surface cell recognition generally involves interaction btw carbohydrate marker of one cell and protein imbedded into cell membrane of another cell 11 Dietary Considerations and Carbohydrates - balanced diet should ideally be about 60% carbohydrate divided into simple and complex categories: i) simple carbohydrate - dietary monosaccharide or disaccharide - usually sweet to taste and commonly referred to as sugars - provide 20% of energy in U.S. diet i) 50% from natural sugars - sugars naturally present in whole foods (milk and fresh fruit) - provides energy and other nutrients ii) 50% from refined sugars - sugar that has been separated from plant source (sugar beets and sugar cane) - said to provide empty calories b/c provide energy and no other nutrients ii) complex carbohydrate - dietary polysaccharide - starch and cellulose, generally not sweet to taste - major source in U.S. is grains (source of both starch and fiber as well as protein, vitamins, and minerals) - vegetables also a good source - developing concern about dietary intake of carbohydrates involves how fast a given dietary carbohydrate is broken down to generate glucose within body glycemic effect - refers to how quickly carbohydrates are digested (broken down into glucose, how high glucose levels rise, and how quickly blood glucose levels return to normal glycemic index (GI) - developed for rating foods in terms of their glycemic effect (see Chemical Connections, p.259) 12 This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.daneprairie.com. 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