Structure Function Carbohydrates
Structure Function Carbohydrates
compounds on hydrolysis.
There are three major size classes of carbohydrates: monosaccharides,
oligosaccharides, and polysaccharides
Both glycogen and cellulose consist of recurring units of D-glucose, but they
differ in the type of glycosidic linkage and consequently have strikingly different
properties and biological roles.
Monosaccharides
(1) Aldoses
In the open-chain form, one of the carbon atoms is double-bonded to an oxygen atom to
form a carbonyl group; each of the other carbon atoms has a hydroxyl group. If the
carbonyl group is at an end of the carbon chain (that is, in an aldehyde group) the
monosaccharide is an aldose
(2) Ketoses
If the carbonyl group is at any other position (in a ketone group) the monosaccharide
is a ketose
.
In aqueous solution, aldotetroses and all monosaccharides with five or more carbon
atoms in the backbone occur predominantly as cyclic (ring) structures in which the
carbonyl group has formed a covalent bond with the oxygen of a hydroxyl group along
the chain. The formation of these ring structures is the result of a general reaction
between alcohols and aldehydes or ketones to form derivatives called hemiacetals or
hemiketals which contain an additional asymmetric carbon atom and thus can exist
in two stereoisomeric forms.
For example, D-glucose exists in solution as an intramolecular hemiacetal in which the
free hydroxyl group at C-5 has reacted with the aldehydic C-1, rendering the latter
carbon asymmetric and producing two stereoisomers, designated and . These six-
membered ring compounds are called pyranoses because they resemble the six
membered ring compound pyran. The systematic names for the two ring forms of D-
glucose are -D-glucopyranose and -D-glucopyranose.
Formation of the two cyclic forms of D-
glucose. Reaction between the aldehyde
group at C-1 and the hydroxyl group at
C-5 forms a hemiacetal linkage, producing
either of two stereoisomers, the and
anomers, which differ only in the
stereochemistry around the hemiacetal
carbon. The interconversion of and
anomers is called mutarotation.
Glycosidic bonds are readily hydrolyzed by acid but resist cleavage by base. Thus
disaccharides can be hydrolyzed to yield their free monosaccharide components by
boiling with dilute acid.
N-glycosyl bonds join the anomeric carbon of a sugar to a nitrogen atom in glycoproteins
The oxidation of a sugar’s anomeric carbon by cupric or ferric ion (the reaction that
defines a reducing sugar) occurs only with the linear form, which exists in equilibrium
with the cyclic form(s). When the anomeric carbon is involved in a glycosidic bond,
that sugar residue cannot take the linear form and therefore becomes a
nonreducing sugar. In describing disaccharides or polysaccharides, the end of a chain
with a free anomeric carbon (one not involved in a glycosidic bond) is commonly called
the reducing end.
Formation of maltose. A disaccharide is
formed from two monosaccharides (here,
two molecules of D-glucose) when an
-OH (alcohol) of one glucose molecule
(right) condenses with the
intramolecular hemiacetal of the other
glucose molecule (left), with elimination of
H2O and formation of an O-glycosidic
bond. The reversal of this reaction is
hydrolysis—attack by H2O on the
glycosidic bond. The maltose molecule
retains a reducing hemiacetal at the
C-1 not involved in the glycosidic bond.
Because mutarotation interconverts
the and forms of the hemiacetal, the
bonds at this position are sometimes
depicted with wavy lines, as shown here,
to indicate that the structure may be
either or .
Example of reducing disaccharide
The disaccharide lactose, which yields D-galactose and D-glucose on hydrolysis,
occurs naturally only in milk. The anomeric carbon of the glucose
residue is available for oxidation, and thus lactose is a reducing disaccharide.
Gal(1 4)Glc
Polysaccharides, also called glycans, differ from each other in the identity of their
Starch and glycogen molecules are heavily hydrated, because they have many exposed
hydroxyl groups available to hydrogen-bond with water.
.
Amylose and amylopectin, the polysaccharides of starch. (a) A short segment of amylose, a linear polymer
of D-glucose residues in (1 4) linkage. A single chain can contain several thousand glucose residues.
Amylopectin has stretches of similarly linked residues between branch points. (b) An (1 6) branch point of
amylopectin. (c) A cluster of amylose and amylopectin like that believed to occur in starch granules. Strands of
amylopectin (red) form doublehelical structures with each other or with amylose strands (blue). Glucose residues
at the nonreducing ends of the outer branches are removed enzymatically during the mobilization of starch for
energy production. Glycogen has a similar structure but is more highly branched and more compact.
Cellulose is not used as fuel while glycogen and starch is. Why?
Glycogen and starch ingested in the diet are hydrolyzed by -amylases, enzymes in
saliva and intestinal secretions that break (1 4) glycosidic bonds between glucose
units. Most animals cannot use cellulose as a fuel source, because they lack an enzyme
to hydrolyze the (1 4) linkages. Termites readily digest cellulose (and therefore
wood), but only because their intestinal tract harbors a symbiotic microorganism,
Trichonympha, that secretes cellulase, which hydrolyzes the (1 4) linkages. Wood-rot
fungi and bacteria also produce cellulase.
The structure of cellulose. (a) Two units of a cellulose chain; the D-glucose residues are in (1n4)
linkage. The rigid chair structures can rotate relative to one another.
(b) Scale drawing of segments of two parallel cellulose chains, showing the conformation of
the D-glucose residues and the hydrogen-bond cross-links. In the hexose unit at the lower left, all
hydrogen atoms are shown; in the other three hexose units, the hydrogens attached to carbon have
been omitted for clarity as they do not participate in hydrogen bonding.
Chitin is a linear homopolysaccharide composed of N-acetylglucosamine residues in
linkage. The only chemical difference from cellulose is the replacement of the hydroxyl
group at C-2 with an acetylated amino group. Chitin forms extended fibers similar to
those of cellulose, and like cellulose cannot be digested by vertebrates. Chitin is the
principal component of the hard exoskeletons of nearly a million species of arthropods—
insects, lobsters, and crabs, for example—and is probably the second most abundant
polysaccharide, next to cellulose, in nature
For example, The most stable three-dimensional structure for starch and glycogen is a
tightly coiled helix stabilized by inter chain hydrogen bonds.
Bacterial and Algal Cell Walls Contain Structural Heteropolysaccharides
The rigid component of bacterial cell walls is a heteropolymer of alternating (1n4)-linked
N-acetylglucosamine and N-acetylmuramic acid residues
The peptide cross-links weld the polysaccharide chains into a strong sheath that
envelops the entire cell and prevents cellular swelling and lysis due to the osmotic entry
of water.
The enzyme lysozyme kills bacteria by hydrolyzing the (1 4) glycosidic bond between
N-acetylglucosamine and N acetylmuramic acid
Penicillin and related antibiotics kill bacteria by preventing synthesis of the cross-links,
leaving the cell wall too weak to resist osmotic lysis
Found in the synovial fluid of joints and give the vitreous humor of the vertebrate eye ,
serve as lubricants its jellylike consistency