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
Chapter 8 - Carbohydrates • Carbohydrates (“hydrate of carbon”) have empirical formulas of (CH2O)n , where n ≥ 3 • Monosaccharides one monomeric unit • Oligosaccharides ~2-20 monosaccharides • Polysaccharides > 20 monosaccharides • Glycoconjugates linked to proteins or lipids • Trioses - 3 carbon sugars • Tetroses - 4 carbon sugars • Pentoses - 5 carbon sugars • Hexoses - 6 carbon sugars Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 8 1 •Trioses - 3 carbon sugars Fig. 8.3 •Tetroses - 4 carbon sugars Fig. 8.3 •Pentoses - 5 carbon sugars Fig. 8.3 •Pentoses - 5 carbon sugars Fig. 8.3 •Hexoses - 6 carbon sugars Fig 8.3 •Hexoses - 6 carbon sugars Fig 8.3 Enantiomers and epimers • D-Sugars predominate in nature • Enantiomers - pairs of D-sugars and L-sugars • Epimers - sugars that differ at only one of several chiral centers • Example: D-galactose is an epimer of D-glucose Fig 8.6 (a) Pyran and (b) furan ring systems • (a) Six-membered sugar ring is a “pyranose” • (b) Five-membered sugar ring is a “furanose” Fig 8.8 Cyclization of D-glucose to form glycopyranose In aqueous solution hexoses and pentoses will cyclize, forming alpha (a) and beta Prentice Hall c2002 (b) forms Chapter 8 10 Fig 8.10 Cyclization of D-ribose to form aand b-D-ribopyranose and a- and b-Dribofuranose 8.4 Derivatives of Monosaccharides • Many sugar derivatives are found in biological systems • Some are part of monosaccharides, oligosaccharides or polysaccharides • These include sugar phosphates, deoxy and amino sugars, sugar alcohols and acids Sugar Phosphates Fig 8.14 Some important sugar phosphates Deoxy Sugars • In deoxy sugars an H replaces an OH Fig 8.15 Deoxy sugars Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 8 14 Amino Sugars • An amino group replaces a monosaccharide OH • Amino group is sometimes acetylated • Amino sugars of glucose and galactose occur commonly in glycoconjugates Sugar Alcohols (polyhydroxy alcohols) • Sugar alcohols: carbonyl oxygen is reduced Fig 8.17 Several sugar alcohols Sugar Acids • Sugar acids are carboxylic acids Fig 8.18 Sugar acids derived from glucose Sugar Acids • L-Ascorbic acid (Vitamin C) is derived from D-glucuronate L-Ascorbic acid (Vitamin C) Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 8 18 Fig 8.18 L-Ascorbic acid Disaccharides and Other Glycosides • Glycosidic bond - primary structural linkage in all polymers of monosaccharides • Glucosides - glucose provides the anomeric carbon Fig 8.20 Structures of disaccharides (a) maltose, (b) cellobiose Fig 8.20 Structures of disaccharides (c) lactose, (d) sucrose Polysaccharides • Homoglycans - homopolysaccharides containing only one type of monosaccharide • Heteroglycans - heteropolysaccharides containing residues of more than one type of monosaccharide • Lengths and compositions of a polysaccharide may vary within a population of these molecules Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 8 21 Starch • D-Glucose is stored intracellularly in polymeric forms • Plants and fungi store glucose as starch • Starch is a mixture of amylose (unbranched) and amylopectin (branched every 25 sugars) (a) Amylose is a linear polymer Figure 8.22 (a) Amylopectin is a branched polymer Prentice Hall c2002 Figure 8.23 Chapter 8 23 Amylose and Amylopectin form helical structures in starch granules of plants Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 8 24 Starch is stored by plants and used as fuel. Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 8 25 Glycogen is is stored by animals and used as fuel. Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 8 26 Glycogen Glycogen is the main storage polysaccharide of humans. Glycogen is a polysaccharide of glucose residues connected by a -(1-4) linkages with a -(1-6) branches (one branch per 10 sugars). Glycogen is present in large amounts in liver and skeletal muscle. Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 8 27 Cellulose, a structural polysaccharide in plants has b-(1-4) glycosidic bonds Fig 8.25 Structure of cellulose Fig 8.26 Cellulose fibrils • Intra- and interchain Hydrogen bonds give strength Humans digest starch and glycogen ingested in their diet using amylases, enzymes that hydrolyze a-(1-4) glycosidic bonds. Humans cannot hydrolyze b-(1-4) linkages of cellulose. Therefore cellulose is not a fuel source for humans. It is fiber. Certain microorganisms have cellulases, enzymes that hydrolyze b-(1-4) linkages of cellulose. Cattle have these organisms in their rumen. Termites have them in their intestinal tract. Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 8 30 Fig 8.27 Structure of chitin The exoskeleton of arthropods • Repeating units of b-(1-4)GlcNAc residues GlcNAc = N-acetylglucosamine Glycoconjugates • Heteroglycans appear in 3 types of glycoconjugates: 1. Proteoglycans 2. Peptidoglycans 3. Glycoproteins Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 8 32 Proteoglycans • Proteoglycans - glycosaminoglycan-protein complexes • Glycosaminoglycans - unbranched heteroglycans of repeating disaccharides of amino sugars (D-galactosamine or D-glucosamine) Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 8 33 Fig 8.28 Repeating disaccharide of hyaluronic acid, a glycosaminoglycan • GlcUA = D-glucuronate • GlcNAc= N-acetylglucosamine Fig 8.29 Proteoglycan aggregate of cartilage Peptidoglycans • Peptidoglycans - heteroglycan chains linked to peptides • Major component of bacterial cell walls • Heteroglycan composed of alternating Nacetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) and Nacetylmuramic acid (MurNAc) • b-(1-4) linkages connect the units Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 8 36 Fig 8.30 Glycan moiety of peptidoglycan Fig 8.31 Structure of the peptidoglycan of the cell wall of Staphylococcus aureus (a) Repeating disaccharide unit, (b) Cross-linking of the peptidoglycan macromolecule Penicillin inhibits a transpeptidase involved in bacterial cell wall formation • Fig 8.32 Structures of penicillin and -D-Ala-D-Ala • Penicillin structure resembling -D-AlaD-Ala is shown in red Glycoproteins • Proteins that contain covalently-bound oligosaccharides, either to serine (O-Glycosidic linkage) or asparagine (N-glycosidic linkage) • Oligosaccharide chains exhibit great variability in sugar sequence and composition Fig. 8.33 O-Glycosidic and N-glycosidic linkages Fig 8.34 and 8.35. Types of glycosidic linkages