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FOOD CHEMISTRY BY DR BOOMINATHAN Ph.D. M.Sc.,(Med. Bio, JIPMER), M.Sc.,(FGS, Israel), Ph.D (NUS, SINGAPORE) PONDICHERRY UNIVERSITY 1/August/2012 Food Science/Chemistry • Food science is an interdisciplinary subject involving primarily bacteriology, chemistry, biology, and engineering. • Food chemistry, a major aspect of food science, deals with the composition and properties of food and the chemical changes it undergoes during handling, processing, and storage. Molecular Food Biochemistry Carbohydrates Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Carbon Chemistry • Carbon atoms can form single, double or triple bonds with other carbon atoms. • Carbon can form up to 4 bonds • This allows carbon atoms to form long chains, almost unlimited in length. Macromolecules • “GIANT MOLECULES” • Made up of numerous of little molecules. • Formed from a process known as polymerization, in which large molecules are produced by joining small ones together. • The small units (monomers), join together to form large units (polymers) Where Do Carbohydrates Come From? • Plants take in • Carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O) + heat from the sun and make glucose. • C6H12O6 Carbohydrates • As the name implies, consist of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. • Hydrate=(water) hydrogen and oxygen. • The basic formula for carbohydrates is C-H2O, meaning that there is one carbon atom, two hydrogen atoms, and one oxygen atom as the ratio in the structure of carbohydrates • What would be the formula for a carbohydrate that has 3 carbons. • C3H6O3 Carbohydrate • Fancy way of saying sugar. • Carbohydrates are energy packed compounds, that can be broken down quickly by organisms to give them energy. • However, the energy supplied by carbohydrates does not last long, and that is why you get hungry every 4 hours. • Carbohydrates are also used for structure. Saccharides • Scientist use the word saccharides to describe sugars. • If there is only one sugar molecule it is known as a monosaccharide • If there are two it is a disaccharide • When there are a whole bunch, it is a polysaccharide. Glucose is a monosaccharide • Notice there is only one sugar molecule. • Glucose is the main fuel for all living cells. • Cells use glucose to do work. Disaccharide Maltose • Maltose is an example of a disaccharide • Notice it is two sugar molecules together. • Glucose + Glucose = Maltose The most common disaccharide is Sucrose • Sucrose is glucose + fructose and is known as common table sugar. Polysaccharide • Polysaccharides are a whole bunch or monosaccharides linked together. • An example of a polysaccharide is starch. Polysaccharide • Polysaccharides are a whole bunch or monosaccharides linked together. • An example of a polysaccharide is starch. Polysaccharide • 90% of the considerable carbohydrate mass in nature is in the form of polysaccharides. • Polysaccharides can be either linear or branched. • The general scientific term for polysaccharides is glycans. • Homoglycan & Hetroglycan • Homoglycan: glycosyl units are of the same sugar type. Eg., Cellulose and Starch amylose (linear) * Starch amylopectin (branched) • Hetroglycan: two or more different monosaccharide units * Diheteroglycans: Most of the names of carbohydrates end in -ose • • • • • Glucose-What plants make Maltose- used in making beer (disaccharide) Fructose – found in fruit (monosaccharide) Sucrose- Table sugar (disaccharide) Lactose – In milk (disaccharide) Isomers • Glucose • C6H12O6 • Fructose • C6H12O6 • Fructose sweeter than glucose because of its structure. Glucose can be found in a ring structure or linear structure • In Water Dehydration Synthesis • Sounds technical but all it really means is taking out the water and making some thing new. • Dehydration is what happens to you when you don’t drink enough water. • Synthesis means “making some thing new” • In this case we are taking out water and connecting glucose with fructose to make sucrose (table sugar) Fructose Sucrose Hydrolysis Hydro=water lysis= break apart • Hydrolysis breaks down a disaccharide molecule into its original monosaccharides. • Hydrolysis, it means that water splits a compound. • When sucrose is added to water, it splits apart into glucose and fructose. • It is just the opposite of dehydration What do we do with all the sugar? • Plants store glucose in the form of polysaccharides known as starch in their roots . • Animals store glucose in the from of a polysaccharide known as glycogen in our liver and muscle cells. Cellulose • The most abundant organic molecule on earth. • Gives trees and plants structure and strength. • Most animals can not break the glucose linkage by normal means of hydrolysis. Need special enzymes. • We need cellulose (fiber) to keep our digestive tracts clean and healthy. Chitin Polysaccharides are used in the shell of crustaceans like crabs and lobsters. Carbohydrates also serve as structural elements. • The chains sticking out of the proteins in the cell membrane are polysaccharides known as cell markers(glycoproteins). How Sweet It Is • The human tongue has four basic taste qualities. • Bitter • Salty • Sour • Sweet • We perceive taste qualities when receptors on our tongue send a message to our brain. Its all about how tightly the molecules fit into the receptors on the tongue. • The chemical structure of a compound determines its shape, which in turn will determine how well it will fit into a receptor. • Compounds that bind more tightly to “sweet” taste receptors send stronger “sweet” messages to the brain. TASTE • Taste buds: mostly on tongue • Two types – Fungiform papillae (small, on entire surface of tongue) – Circumvallate papillae (inverted “V” near back of tongue) 28 • Taste buds of 50-100 epithelial cells each • Taste receptor cells (gustatory cells) • Microvilli through pore, bathed in saliva • Disolved molecules bind & induce receptor cells to generate impulses in sensory nerve fibers 29 Carbohydrate Structure Carbohydrates • • • • • Cx(H2O)y 70-80% human energy needs >90% dry matter of plants Monomers and polymers Functional properties – Sweetness – Chemical reactivity – Polymer functionality Simple Sugars • Cannot be broken down by mild acid hydrolysis • C3-9 (esp. 5 and 6) • Polyalcohols with aldehyde or ketone functional group • Many chiral compounds • C has tetrahedral bond angles Nomenclature: Classification of Carbohydrates Number of carbons Functional group Ketone Aldehyde 4 Tetrose Tetrulose 5 Pentose Pentulose 6 Hexose Hexulose 7 Heptose Heptulose 8 Octose Octulose 9 Nanose Nanolose Table 1 Chiral Carbons • A carbon is chiral if it has four different groups • A chiral carbon atom is one that can exist in two different spatial arrangements (configurations). • Chiral compounds have the same composition but are not superimposable (two different arrangements of the four groups in space (configurations) are nonsuperimposable mirror images of each other) • Display in Fisher projection CHO CHO H OH CH2OH D-glyceraldehyde ENANTIOMERS HO H CH2OH L-glyceraldehyde Glucose • Fisher projection • D-series sugars are built on Dglyceraldehyde • 3 additional chiral carbons • 23 D-series hexosulose sugars (based on D-glyceraldehyde) • 23 L-series based on Lglyceraldehyde • D-Glucose is the most abundant carbohydrate H O C-1 H OH C-2 H C-3 H OH C-4 H OH C-5 H OH C-6 HO H Original D-glyceraldehyde carbon D-Fructose • A ketose sugar found abundantly in natural foods • One less chiral carbon than the corresponding aldose (only 3) • Sweetest known sugar • 55% of high-fructose corn syrup • and about 40% of honey H2C CH3 O HO CH HC OH HC OH C OH H2 Carbohydrates (glycans) have the following basic composition: (CH2O)n I or H - C - OH I Monosaccharides - simple sugars with multiple OH groups. Based on number of carbons (3, 4, 5, 6), a monosaccharide is a triose, tetrose, pentose or hexose. Disaccharides - 2 monosaccharides covalently linked. Oligosaccharides - a few monosaccharides covalently linked. Polysaccharides - polymers consisting of chains of monosaccharide or disaccharide units. Monosaccharides Aldoses (e.g., glucose) have an aldehyde group at one end. H Ketoses (e.g., fructose) have a keto group, usually at C2. O CH2OH C C O HO C H OH H C OH OH H C OH H C OH HO C H H C H C CH2OH CH2OH D-glucose D-fructose D vs L configuration CHO CHO D & L designations are H C OH based on the CH2OH configuration about the single asymmetric D-glyceraldehyde C in glyceraldehyde. HO H C OH CH2OH D-glyceraldehyde H CH2OH L-glyceraldehyde CHO The lower representations are Fischer Projections. C CHO HO C H CH2OH L-glyceraldehyde Sugar Nomenclature For sugars with more than one chiral center, D or L refers to the asymmetric C farthest from the aldehyde or keto group. Most naturally occurring sugars are D isomers. O H C H – C – OH HO – C – H H – C – OH H – C – OH CH2OH D-glucose O H C HO – C – H H – C – OH HO – C – H HO – C – H CH2OH L-glucose D & L sugars are mirror images of one another. They have the same name, e.g., D-glucose & L-glucose. Other stereoisomers have unique names, e.g., glucose, mannose, galactose, etc. O H C H – C – OH HO – C – H H – C – OH H – C – OH CH2OH D-glucose O C HO – C – H H – C – OH HO – C – H HO – C – H CH2OH L-glucose The number of stereoisomers is 2n, where n is the number of asymmetric centers. The 6-C aldoses have 4 asymmetric centers. Thus there are 16 stereoisomers (8 D-sugars and 8 L-sugars). H Hemiacetal & hemiketal formation An aldehyde can react with an alcohol to form a hemiacetal. A ketone can react with an alcohol to form a hemiketal. H C H O + R' OH R' O R OH R aldehyde alcohol hemiacetal R C C R O + "R OH R' ketone "R O C R' alcohol hemiketal OH Pentoses and hexoses can cyclize as the ketone or aldehyde reacts with a distal OH. Glucose forms an intra-molecular hemiacetal, as the C1 aldehyde & C5 OH react, to form a 6-member pyranose ring, named after pyran. 1 H HO H H 2 3 4 5 6 CHO C OH C H C OH (linear form) C OH D-glucose CH2OH 6 CH2OH 6 CH2OH 5 H 4 OH H OH 3 H O H H 1 2 OH -D-glucose OH 5 H 4 OH H OH 3 H O OH H 1 2 OH -D-glucose These representations of the cyclic sugars are called Haworth projections. H CH2OH 1 HO H H 2C O C H C OH C OH 3 4 5 6 HOH2C 6 CH2OH D-fructose (linear) H 5 H 1 CH2OH O 4 OH HO 2 3 OH H -D-fructofuranose Fructose forms either a 6-member pyranose ring, by reaction of the C2 keto group with the OH on C6, or a 5-member furanose ring, by reaction of the C2 keto group with the OH on C5. 6 CH2OH 6 CH2OH 5 H 4 OH O H OH 3 H H 2 OH -D-glucose H 1 OH 5 H 4 OH H OH 3 H O OH H 1 2 H OH -D-glucose Cyclization of glucose produces a new asymmetric center at C1. The 2 stereoisomers are called anomers, & . Haworth projections represent the cyclic sugars as having essentially planar rings, with the OH at the anomeric C1: (OH below the ring) (OH above the ring). H OH H OH 4 6 H O HO HO H O HO H HO 5 3 H H 2 H OH 1 OH -D-glucopyranose H OH OH H -D-glucopyranose Because of the tetrahedral nature of carbon bonds, pyranose sugars actually assume a "chair" or "boat" configuration, depending on the sugar. The representation above reflects the chair configuration of the glucopyranose ring more accurately than the Haworth projection. Sugar derivatives CHO COOH CH2OH H C OH H C OH H C OH CH2OH D-ribitol H C OH HO C H OH H C OH OH H C OH H C OH HO C H H C H C CH2OH D-gluconic acid COOH D-glucuronic acid sugar alcohol - lacks an aldehyde or ketone; e.g., ribitol. sugar acid - the aldehyde at C1, or OH at C6, is oxidized to a carboxylic acid; e.g., gluconic acid, glucuronic acid. Sugar derivatives CH2OH CH2OH O H H OH H H OH H OH OH H NH2 -D-glucosamine O H H H O OH OH H N C CH3 H -D-N-acetylglucosamine amino sugar - an amino group substitutes for a hydroxyl. An example is glucosamine. The amino group may be acetylated, as in acetylglucosamine. N- H O H3C C O NH R H COO H R= OH H HC OH HC OH CH2OH OH H N-acetylneuraminate (sialic acid) N-acetylneuraminate (N-acetylneuraminic acid, also called sialic acid) is often found as a terminal residue of oligosaccharide chains of glycoproteins. Sialic acid imparts negative charge to glycoproteins, because its carboxyl group tends to dissociate a proton at physiological pH, as shown here.