Biochemistry - Carbohydrates
Biochemistry - Carbohydrates
• Sugars that undergo this reaction are called reducing sugars. (All of the
monosaccharides are reducing sugars.)
MONOSACCHARIDES – Phosphate Esters
MONOSACCHARIDES
Glycoside Formation
Methyl-α-D-Glucoside
Cytidine Uridine
Adenosine Guanosine
MONOSACCHARIDES – β-D-deoxyribose derivatives
deoxycytidine deoxythymidine
deoxyadenosine deoxyguanosine
DISACCHARIDES
• The word “Disaccharides” derived from the Greek word “Di” means Two and
“saccharide” means sugar joined together by an O-glycosidic bond /linkage.
Classification:
Homo-disaccharides
and
Hetero-disaccharides
HOMO-
Maltose Isomaltose Cellobiose
DISACCHARIDES
Structure 2-α-glucose 2-α-glucose 2-β-glucose
Type of bond α-1-4- glucosidic bond α-1-6-glucosidic bond β-1-4- glucosidic bond
Isomaltose
Maltose Cellobiose
HETERO-DISACCHARIDES Sucrose Lactose
Composition α-D-glucose + β-D-fructose β-D-galactose + β-D-glucose
Type of bond α-1-β-2-glucosidic bond β-1-α-4-glucosidic bond
Anomeric Carbon No Free aldehyde or ketone group Free
Reducing Property Non-Reducing Reducing
Lactase aids in yielding galactose
Effect of hydrolysis Yields glucose and fructose
and glucose
Milk sugar - It may appear in urine in
Present in Table sugar, Cane sugar, beet sugar late pregnancy and during lactation
Sucrose Lactose
OLIGOSACCHARIDES
• The word “Oligosaccharides” derived from the Greek word “Oligo” means
‘a few’ and “saccharide” means sugar. They contain contain from 3 to 10
monosaccharide units joined together by an O-glycosidic bond /linkage.
Raffinose
Amylopectin
POLYSACCHARIDE
Starch
POLYSACCHARIDE – Glycogen
• Glycogen, also known as animal starch, is structurally similar to amylopectin, containing
both α(1→4) glycosidic linkages and α(1→6) branch points.
• Glycogen is even more highly branched, however, with branches occuring every 8 to 12
glucose units.
• Glycogen is abundant in the liver
and muscles; on hydrolysis it forms
glucose, which maintains normal
blood sugar level and provides
energy.
POLYSACCHARIDE – Cellulose
• Cellulose is a polymer consisting of long, unbranched chains of D-glucose connected by
β(1→4) glycosidic linkages; it may contain from 300 to 3000 glucose units in one
molecule.
• cellulose has a different
overall shape from
amylose, forming
hydrogen bond to each
other, resulting in a very
rigid structure
• plant cell walls that
provides strength and
rigidity; wood is 50%
cellulose
POLYSACCHARIDE – Cellulose
• Cellulose microfibrils arrange themselves into thicker bundles called microfibrils.
(These are usually referred to as fibres)
• Most animals lack the enzymes needed to digest cellulose, although it does provide
needed roughage (dietary fiber) to stimulate contraction of the intestines and thus help
pass food along through the digestive system
• Cellulose is also important industrially, from its presence in wood, paper, cotton,
cellophane, rayon, linen, nitrocellulose (guncotton), photographic films (cellulose
acetate), etc
POLYSACCHARIDE – Others
• Chitin, Inulin, Pectin, Hyaluronic acid, Chondroitin, Heparin
MUTAROTATION
• Mutarotation is the change in the optical rotation because of the change in the
equilibrium between two anomers, when the corresponding stereocenters interconvert.
• Cyclic sugars show mutarotation as α and β anomeric forms interconvert.
• The optical rotation of the solution depends on the optical rotation of each anomer and
their ratio in the solution.
GLYCOSAMINOGLYCANS
• Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) or mucopolysaccharides are long linear polysaccharides
consisting of repeating disaccharide (double sugar) units. Except for keratan, the
repeating unit consists of an amino sugar, along with a uronic sugar or galactose
Hyaluronan
Chondroitin Sulfate