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Carbohydrate (2) CHEMICAL PROPERTIES • • • • • • • • Oxidation Reduction Fermentation Polymerization Hydrolisis Browning non enzymatic Caramelization Osazone formation OXIDATION OF GLUCOSE • The reaction is commonly used for quantitative determination of sugars • Fehling solution is an alkaline solution of copper(II) that oxidizes an aldose to an aldonate and in the process is reduced to copper(I), which precipitates as brick-red Cu2O. OXIDATION OF GLUCOSE O O C H H C OH HO C H H C OH C OH Benedicts reagent + Cu H C OH CH2OH D-glucose Glucose is a reducing sugar 2+ Glucose is oxidized to a carboxylic acid H C OH [O] HO C H H C OH H C OH CH2OH D-gluconic acid + Cu2O(s) Cu+ (reduced form) Reduction • Reduction : Reduction of carbonyl group gives thecorresponding alcohol e . g . glucose gives sorbitol , ribose gives ribitol , galactose gives galacticol. Reduction • Hydrogenation is the addition of hydrogen to a double bond • Sorbitol can be obtained by hydrogenation of D-glucose • D-Mannitol can be obtained by hydrogenation of D-mannose. • Xylitol is produced from hydrogenation of D-xylose obtained from hemicelluloses Reduction Fermentation • Fermentation : Fermentation is the action of bacterial or Yeast enzymes on carbohydrate. • Yeast : saccharomyces cerevisae Polymerization • Polymerization reactions are building reactions • These reactions build polymers from monomers and lose water in the process • Polymerization reactions between carbohydrates leads to the formation of – Disaccharides – Oligosaccharides – Polysaccharides • Polymerization reactions: – Occur between intermolecular hydroxyl groups – Result in a covalent glycosidic bond linkage Polymerization Browning Reaction • Maillard browning reducing sugar + amine brown pigments + flavors • Caramelization high temps sugar brown pigments + flavors • Enzymatic browning polyphenoloxidase phenolics brown pigments + flavors Browning non enzymatic • Under some conditions, reducing sugars produce brown colors that are desirable and important in some foods. • Other brown colors obtained upon heating or during long-term storage of foods containing reducing sugars are undesirable. • Common browning of foods on heating or on storage is usually due to a chemical reaction between reducing sugars, mainly D-glucose, and a free amino acid or a free amino group of an amino acid that is part of a protein chain. • This reaction is called the Maillard reaction (nonenzymic browning) Browning non enzymatic • Maillard browning products, including soluble and insoluble polymers, are found where reducing sugars and amino acids, proteins, and/or other nitrogen-containing compounds are heated together, such as in soy sauce and bread crusts. • Maillard reaction products are important contributors to the flavor of milk chocolate. The Maillard reaction is also important in the production of caramels, toffees, during which reducing sugars also react with milk proteins Step Maillard • Condensation : reducing sugar + primary amine glucose glycosyloamine + water • Amadori rearrangement : glucose glycosyloamine intermediet (1-amino-1-αdeoxy- α -D-fructopyranose) flavor + color • Polymerization : intermediet melanoidin (dark brown) + flavor Browning non enzymatic • Desirable: Flavor - coffee, cocoa, meats Color - bread crust, syrup, meat Antioxidants • Undesirable Color - changes in color during storage Flavor - changes during processing and storage Nutritional loss - essential amino acids, Vitamins (vit c) Toxicity/mutagenicity Caramelization • The formation of the caramel pigment can be considered a nonenzymatic browning reaction in the absence of nitrogenous compounds. • When sugars are subjected to heat in the absence of water or are heated in concentrated solution, a series of reactions occurs that finally leads to caramel formation. • Heating of carbohydrates, in particular sucrose reducing sugars, without nitrogen-containing compounds effects a complex group of reactions termed caramelization. Reaction is facilitated by small amounts of acids and certain salts. Caramelization • Mostly thermolysis causes dehydration of the sugar molecule with introduction of double bonds or formation of anhydro rings. • Conjugated double bonds absorb light and produce color. • Brown caramel color made by heating a sucrose solution with ammonium bisulfite is used in cola soft drinks, other acidic beverages, baked goods, syrups, candies, pet foods, and dry seasonings Caramelization Caramelization • At high temperatures, sugar reactions are accelerated Isomerization Water elimination Oxidation • Caramelization occurs at High temperatures (~150°C) Low water content/high sugar • Formation of Caramel flavors and Enediols pigments Dicarbony Caramelization Sugar Fructose Galactose Glucose Maltose Sucrose T (oC) 110 160 160 180 160 Osazone formation • Osazone formation : Osazone are characteristic crystals resulting from the reaction of sugars with phenylhydrazine . All sugars having free carbonyl group can form osazone crystal • Phenylhydrazine (C6H5NHNH2) reacts with carbons #1 and #2 of reducing sugars to form derivatives called osazones. The formation of these distinctive crystalline derivatives is useful for comparing the structures of sugars Osazone formation • Firstly glucose with phenylhydrazine gives us glucosephenylhydrazone by elimination of a water molecule from the functional group. • The next step involves reaction of one mole of glucosephenylhydrazone with two moles of phenylhydrazine (excess). Osazone formation SUGAR VS ARTIFICIAL SWEETERNER • • • • • Aspartame Saccharin Sucralose cyclamate Stevia STEVIA • Active compounds: group of diterpene (steviol) glycosides – dulcoside A, rebaudiosides A-E , steviolbioside, &stevioside • Rebaudioside A (3.8%) and stevioside (9.1%) are the sweetest, most abundant, & most important commercially Chemical structure of stevioside (left) and rebaudioside A (right) Extraction & Commercial Uses • Processing of dried leaves from Stevia produces a powdery white substance (stevioside), which is three hundred times sweeter, by weight, than sucrose derived from sugar cane • Water extraction process followed by crystallization techniques to isolate the steviol glycosides Nutrition • The dried leaves are 30 to 45 times as sweet as sucrose • Non-nutritive, three hundred times sweeter than sugar, heat stable, non-fermentable, as well as an anti-plaque and anti-carie • More studies must be conducted on bulking agents to make it easy to replace it for sugar • saccharin may not be as sweet as they taste, it contains anthranilic acid, nitrous acid, sulfur dioxide and chlorine fused with ammonia. • Sucralose, which is sugar chemically modified by the addition of chlorine • The key is a molecule known only as GIV3727 that specifically targets and inhibits a handful of human bitter taste receptors,