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Phosphate Ester Formation • Hydroxyl group + H3PO4 --> Phosphate Ester • Phosphate esters are important compounds in carbohydrate metabolism. Phosphate ester formation -D-glucose-1-phosphate Sugar and phosphate combinations are the basis for nucleotides involved in DNA / RNA, energy carrying molecules (ADP & ATP), and chemical messengers (cAMP) Amino Sugar Formation • Hydroxyl group is replaced by an amino group --> Aldosamine – Important in cartilage polysaccharides and red blood cell markers (ABO) – There are 3 important, naturally-occurring amino sugars. • In each the amino group is on C#2. Amino sugar formation Glucosamine and hyaluronic acid act as the backbone for the formation of proteoglycans found in the structural matrix of joints Glycosidic bonds: The hydroxyl group and a hydroxyl group of another sugar or other compound can join together, splitting out water to form a glycosidic bond. Acting hemiacetal Acting as an alcohol R-OH + HO-R' R-O-R' + H2O glycosidic linking helps form disaccharides, oligosaccharides, and polysaccharides from rings of monosaccharides Disaccharide formation Alpha () or beta () describes the –OH orientation on C #1. The numbers represent the C # connections on the Haworth projection Disaccharides • Formation of disaccharides is like glycoside formation (condensation rxn) • • • • • • – Monosaccharide + alcohol --> glycoside + H2O Monosaccharide + monosaccharide --> disaccharide + H2O Disaccharide glycosidic linkage Reducing? Human Digestion Maltose (1-4) yes easily Cellobiose (1-4) yes no Lactose (1-4) yes usually Sucrose (1-2) no yes Common Disaccharides: Sucrose: -Glucose and -Fructose , (12) glycosidic linkage Milk sugar: galactose and glucose connected (14) glycosidic linkage of 2 D-Glucose molecules Polysaccharides (glycan) • Variations – – – – Homopolysaccharides vs. Heteropolysaccharides Length of chain Type of Glycoside Linkage Degree of Branching • Properties – – – – NOT sweet No positive Tollens or Fehling’s test Limited water solubility Colloids form readily Storage Polysaccharides energy source (homopolysaccharides) Starch (plants) amylose (15-20%) straight-chain -glucose polymer (~1000 G) amylopectin (80-85%) branched chain (~100,000 G) glucose polymer (~100,0000 G) Starch + H2O --> glucose Nutritional value Glycogen (animals) Highly branched glucose polymer (~1,000,000 G) Glucose <==> Glycogen (stored in liver & muscle) Cellulose Structural Polysaccharides (homopolysaccharides) Cellulose (cell wall) straight chain -glucose polymer Chitin (exoskeleton) N-acetyl amino derivative of glucose Cotton and wood are primarily cellulose (14) glycosidic bonds of two glucose rings create linear but angled bonding. Our enzymes cannot match this bond angle structure to hydrolyze cellulose into cellobiose subunits or break that down to glucose Acidic Polysaccharides (heteropolysaccharides) • Hyaluronic acid – Joint lubricant Hyaluronic acid: heteropolysaccharide – 2 different glucose derivatives: Glucuronic acid plus N-acetyl--D-Glucosamine Alternates (13) and (14) linkage • Heparin – Anticoagulant Acidic polysaccharides associated with the connective tissue of joints give hurdlers such as these the flexibility needed to accomplish their task. Glycolipids & Glycoproteins • These form when glycosidic linkages connect monosaccharides with lipids &/or proteins. • Very important molecules for cell recognition processes Dietary Considerations • A balanced diet ~ 60% carbohydrate – Simple carbs = mono & disaccharides – Complex carbs = polysaccharides – Starch – Cellulose • Natural vs. Refined Sugars – Natural: a mixture of sugar and other compounds – Refined: 100% sugar molecules • Glycemic effect: due to the rate of carbohydrate digestion – Glycemic index Glycemic Index: Measures the rate that specific carbohydrates are hydrolyzed into glucose. Slow release of glucose into blood = good Quick release of glucose into blood / overproduction of insulin = bad