Transcript Sugars
Sugars
Alice Skoumalová
Repetition:
1. Glucose, fructose and galactose (structure)
2. Optical isomerism - definition (D- and L-glucose)
3. Formation of a cyclic glucose (anomers)
4. Reducing sugars - definition
5. The most important disaccharides (composition)
6. The most important polysaccharides (structure)
Important sugars in an organism:
1. Glucose
2. Glycogen
3. Glycoproteins
4. Glycolipids
5. Proteoglycans
An introduction to carbohydrates:
a large class of naturally occurring polyhydroxy aldehydes
and ketones
monosaccharides (simple sugars): from 3 to 7 carbons +
one aldehyde or ketone functional group
chiral compounds (having right- or left-handedness with two
different mirror-image forms) because they contain carbons bonded to
four different groups
An aldose
A ketose
Monosaccharides, disaccharides, polysaccharides
Modified saccharides
The D and L families of sugars:
Enantiomers - „mirror images“ (rotate polarized light in opposite directions →
optical activity)
Fischer projection:
a mirror
D sugar → the OH group on the chiral carbon farthest from the
carbonyl group pointing to the right in a Fischer projection
L sugar → the OH group on the chiral carbon farthest from the
carbonyl group pointing to the right in a Fischer projection
2n of possible stereoisomers (half that many pairs of enantiomers)
n - the number of chiral carbons (e.g. glucose - 16 stereoisomers)
The structure of glucose:
Mutarotation
change in rotation of plane-polarized
light resulting from the equilibrium
between cyclic anomers and the openchain form of a sugar
Anomers
cyclic sugars that differ
only in positions of
substituents at the
anomeric carbon
Reactions of the monosaccharides:
Reaction with oxidizing agents:
Reducing sugars react in basic solution with a mild oxidizing agent
In basic solutions, all monosaccharides are reducing sugars
Reaction with alcohols (glycoside formation):
Glycosidic bond → bond between the anomeric carbon of a monosaccharide and
an -OR group
Hydrolysis of a disaccharide (during digestion of carbohydrates)
Important monosaccharides
Aldoses:
Pentoses
in RNA and
NADH
in polysaccharides in the walls
of plant cells
Hexoses
„blood“ sugar (energy)
in cellulose and starch
in glycogen (as a
source of energy in an
organism)
in glycolipids and
glycoproteins
in lactose (milk),
glycolipids and
glycoproteins
converted to glucose
galactosemia
Ketoses:
D-Ribulose
D-Fructose
an intermediate in the pentose
phoshate pathway
in fruit juices and in honey
in sucrose
converted to glucose
Deoxyaldoses:
2-deoxy-D-ribose
in DNA
Acetylated amino sugars:
N-Acetyl-D-glucosamine
N-Acetyl-D-galactosamine
in glycoproteins
Acidic sugars:
D-Glucuronic acid
N-Acetylneuraminic acid (sialic)
in glycosaminoglycans in connective
tissue
conjugation of bile acids
in glycoproteins
Important disaccharides
Maltose
a breakdown product of the
starch
Lactose
milk sugar (4,5% - 7%)
lactose intolerance (reduced
activity of lactase)
Sucrose
cane sugar, beet sugar
non-reducing sugar
Important polysaccharides
Cellulose
ß-D-Glucose, ß-1,4 link
the fibrous substance that provides structure in
plants
humans cannot hydrolyze cellulose
Starch
α-D-Glucose
source of energy in plants
fully digestible - an essential part of the human diet (the grains wheat, potatoes, rice)
1. Amylose (20%, soluble in water)
α-1,4 link
2. Amylopectin (80%, not water soluble)
α-1,6 branches (every 25 units)
Glycogen
α-D-Glukose, α-1,4 and α-1,6 link
source of energy in animals (liver, muscles)
Other important sugars
1. Glycosaminoglycans
Hyaluronic acid
Chondroitin sulfate
25,000 disaccharide units
in tendons and cartilage
form very viscous mixture
in connective tissue, synovial fluid,
vitreous humour
Glucuronic acid
Glucuronic acid
N-Acetylglucosamine
N-Acetylgalactosamine
sulfate
Heparin
contains sulfate groups (negative charges)
anticoagulant - prevents the clotting of blood (binds to the clotting
factors)
2. Proteoglycans
aggregates of proteins and glycosaminoglycans in the extracellular matrix
highly hydrated and resilient (cartilage)
3. Glycoproteins
on the surfaces of cells (receptors, blood type)
Forms:
Blood type
cell-surface carbohydrates
Summary:
1. Epimers, enantiomers, anomers (examples)
2. The most important reaction of monosaccharides
3. The importance of glucose
4. Important disaccharides
5. Important polysaccharides
6. Glycosaminoglycans and proteoglycans - structure, function
7. Glycoproteins - structure, function