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Carbohydrates

Carbohydrates. 42 Mo. Andy Howard Biochemistry Lectures, Spring 2019 Tuesday 26 March 2019. Carbohydrates are more than just energy sources. We’ll introduce names carbohydrate monomers and oligomers Carbohydrates can be cyclic or derivatized, and they can be oligomerized and polymerized.

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Carbohydrates

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  1. Carbohydrates 42Mo Andy HowardBiochemistry Lectures, Spring 2019 Tuesday 26 March 2019

  2. Carbohydrates are more than just energy sources • We’ll introduce names carbohydrate monomers and oligomers • Carbohydrates can be cyclic or derivatized, and they can be oligomerized and polymerized. • Glycoconjugates are complexes involving sugar and peptide oligomers or polymers Carbohydrates

  3. Carbohydrates Names & depictions Cyclic Forms Sugar Derivatives Acetals & ketals Glycosides Oligosaccharides Polysaccharides Storage Structural Glycoconjugates Proteoglycans Peptidoglycans Glycoproteins What we’ll discuss Carbohydrates

  4. Fischer projections Emil Fischer • Convention for drawing open-chain monosaccharides • If the hydroxyl comes off counterclockwise relative to the previous carbon, we draw it to the left; • Clockwise to the right; or • If the chiral carbon is up, then it’s L if the OH is on the left Carbohydrates

  5. Cyclic sugars • Aldoses with ≥ 4 carbons & ketoses with ≥ 5 carbons can readily interconvert between the open-chain forms we have drawn and five-membered(furanose) or six-membered (pyranose) ring forms in which the carbonyl oxygen becomes part of the ring • Remember that 5- and 6-atom rings form with little or no strain; 4- and 3- are much harder • There are no C=O bonds in the ring forms Carbohydrates

  6. 1 Furanoses 5 2 4 3 furan • Formally derived from structure of furan • Hydroxyls hang off of the ring; stereochemistry preserved there • Extra carbons come off at 2 and 5 positions • Note that there are four carbons in this 5-membered ring Carbohydrates

  7. 1 Pyranoses 6 2 3 5 • Formally derived from structure of pyran • Hydroxyls hang off of the ring; stereochemistry preserved there • Extra carbons come off at 2 and 6 positions • Note that there are 5 carbons in this 6-membered ring 4 pyran Carbohydrates

  8. How do we cyclize a sugar? • Formation of an internal hemiacetal or hemiketal (see a few slides from here) by conversion of the terminal hydroxyl to a ring oxygen while the carbonyl becomes a hydroxyl • Not a net oxidation or reduction;in fact it’s a true isomerization. • The molecular formula for the cyclized form is the same as the open chain form Carbohydrates

  9. Family tree of aldoses • Simplest: D-, L- glyceraldehyde (C3) • Add —CHOH: D,L-threose, erythrose (C4) • Add —CHOH:D,L- lyxose, xylose, arabinose, ribose (C5) • Add —CHOH:D,L-talose, galactose, idose, gulose,mannose, glucose, altrose, allose (C6) Carbohydrates

  10. Family tree of ketoses • Simplest: dihydroxyacetone (C3) • Add —CHOH: D,L-erythrulose (C4) • Add —CHOH:D,L- ribulose, xylulose(C5) • Add —CHOH:D,L-sorbose, tagatose, fructose, psicose (C6) Carbohydrates

  11. Relative significance (?) Glucose, fructose, galactose,mannose, ribose, glyceraldehyde, xylose, arabinose Carbohydrates

  12. Haworth projections • …provide a way of keeping track the chiral centers in a cyclic sugar, as the Fischer projections enable for straight-chain sugars (cf. fig. 16.9) Sir Walter Haworth Carbohydrates

  13. O The anomeric carbon C O • In any cyclic sugar (monosaccharide, or single unit of an oligosaccharide, or polysaccharide) there is one carbon that has covalent bonds to two different oxygen atoms • We describe this carbon as the anomeric carbon Carbohydrates

  14. iClicker question #1 1. Which is the anomeric carbon in b-D-fructopyranose? • (a) 1 • (b) 2 • (c) 3 • (d) 6 • (e) none of the above. Carbohydrates

  15. a-D-gluco-pyranose • One of 2 possible pyranose forms of D-glucose • There are two because the anomeric carbon itself becomes chiral when we cyclize • Anomeric carbon is not chiral in open-chain form Carbohydrates

  16. b-D-glucopyranose • Differs froma-D-glucopyranose only at anomeric carbon Carbohydrates

  17. Why is glucose special? • All aldohexoses are fairly similar • Glucose is the only aldohexose that, when built into the pyranose form, can be drawn with all its bulky substituents(–OH, –CH2OH) in equatorial positions • This minimizes steric clashes • This matters enough that some hexoses are actually marginally more stable as furanoses, e.g. fructose Carbohydrates

  18. Count carefully! • It’s tempting to think that hexoses are pyranoses and pentoses are furanoses; • But that’s not always true • The ring always contains an oxygen, so even a pentose can form a pyranose • In solution: pyranose, furanose, open-chain forms are all present • Percentages depend on the sugar Carbohydrates

  19. 5-carbon example:cyclic D-arabinose • Note that the pyranose forms of 5-carbon sugars have no non-ring carbons Carbohydrates

  20. Substituted monosaccharides (cf. §16.2) • Substitutions on the various positions retain some sugar-like character • Some substituted monosaccharides are building blocks of polysaccharides Carbohydrates

  21. Specific substitutions O O- OH HO O HO O HO HO OH OH D-glucuronic acid(GlcUA) GlcNAc HNCOCH3 HO Amination, acetylamination common Reduction to alcohols, oxidation to carboxylates Carbohydrates

  22. Sugar acids • Gluconic acid: • glucose carboxylated @ 1 position • In equilibrium with lactone form • Glucuronic acid:glucose carboxylated @ 6 position • Glucaric acid:glucose carboxylated @ 1 and 6 positions • Iduronic acid: idosecarboxylated @ 6 D--gluconolactone Carbohydrates

  23. iClicker question #2 2. Gluconic acid requires a 2-electron oxidation of carbon 1 of glucose. How many electrons of oxidation are required to convert glucose to glucuronic acid? • (a) 0 • (b) 1 • (c) 2 • (d) 4 • (e) none of the above. Carbohydrates

  24. Sugar alcohols • Mild reduction of sugars convert aldehyde or ketone moiety to alcohol • Generates an additional asymmetric center in ketoses with > 3 carbons • These remain in open-chain forms • Smallest: glycerol • Sorbitol, myo-inositol, ribitol are important Carbohydrates

  25. Sugar esters • Phosphate esters of sugars are significant metabolic intermediates • 5’, 3’ positions on ribose is phosphorylated in nucleotides • Hexoses are typically phosphorylated at 1 or 6 Glucose 6-phosphate Carbohydrates

  26. Amino sugars • Hydroxyl at 2- position of hexoses is replaced with an amine group • Amine is often acetylated (CH3C=O) • These aminated and N-acetylated sugars are found in many polysaccharides and glycoproteins Carbohydrates

  27. Hemiacetals and hemiketals • Hemiacetals and hemiketals are compounds that have an –OH and an –OR group on the same carbon • Cyclic monosaccharides are automatically hemiacetals & hemiketals (cf. fig. 16.7) Carbohydrates

  28. Oligosaccharides and other glycosides (§16.3) • A glycoside is any compound in which the hydroxyl group of the anomeric carbon is replaced via condensation with an alcohol, an amine, or a thiol • All oligosaccharides are glycosides, but so are a lot of monomeric sugar derivatives, like nucleosides Carbohydrates

  29. Sucrose: a glycoside • A disaccharide • Linkage is between anomeric carbons of contributing monosaccharides, which are glucose and fructose Carbohydrates

  30. Other disaccharides • Maltose • glc-glc with -glycosidic bond from left-hand glc • Produced in brewing, malted milk, etc. • Cellobiose • -glc-glc • Breakdown product from cellulose Carbohydrates

  31. Lactose: another disaccharide • Lactose: -gal-glc • Milk sugar • Lactose intolerance caused by absence of enzyme capable of hydrolyzing this glycoside Carbohydrates

  32. Reducing sugars • Sugars that can undergo ring-opening to form the open-chain aldehyde compounds that can be oxidized to carboxylic acids • We describe those as reducing sugars because they can reduce metal ions or amino acids in the presence of base Carbohydrates

  33. Benedict’s test Stanley R. Benedict (courtesy Wikimedia) Benedict’s test:2Cu2+ + RCH=O + 5OH-Cu2O + RCOO- + 3H2O Cuprous oxide is red and insoluble Carbohydrates

  34. Ketoses are reducing sugars • In presence of base a ketose can spontaneously rearrange to an aldose via an enediol intermediate, and then the aldose can be oxidized. Carbohydrates

  35. Sucrose: not a reducing sugar • Both anomeric carbons are involved in the glycosidic bond, so they can’t rearrange or open up, so it can’t be oxidized • Bottom line: only sugars in which the anomeric carbon is free are reducing sugars Carbohydrates

  36. Why does this matter? • Partly historical: this cuprate reaction was one of the first well-characterized tools for characterizing these otherwise very similar compounds • But it also gives us a convenient way of distinguishing among types of glycosidic arrangements, even if we never really use Cu2+ ions in experiments Carbohydrates

  37. Reducing & nonreducing ends • Typically, oligo and polysaccharides have a reducing end and a nonreducing end • Non-reducing end is the sugar moiety whose anomeric carbon is involved in the glycosidic bond • Reducing end is sugar whose anomeric carbon is free to open up and oxidize • Enzymatic lengthening and degradation of polysaccharides occurs at nonreducing end or ends Carbohydrates

  38. Nucleosides • Anomeric carbon of ribose (or deoxyribose) is linked to nitrogen of RNA (or DNA) base (A,C,G,T,U) • Ribose is in furanose form • This is an example of an N-glycoside Adenosine Carbohydrates

  39. Acetals and ketals • Acetals and ketals have two —OR groups on a single carbon • Acetals and ketals are found in glycosidic bonds, e.g. in oligosaccharides & nucleosides aldehyde alcohol hemiacetal acetal Carbohydrates

  40. Polysaccharides (§16.4) • Homoglycans: all building blocks same • Heteroglycans: more than one kind of building block • No equivalent of genetic code for carbohydrates, so long ones will be heterogeneous in length and branching, and maybe even in monomer identity Carbohydrates

  41. Polysaccharides: homoglycans • Storage homoglycans (all monomers are glucose (Glc)) • Starch: amylose ((14)Glc) , amylopectin • Glycogen • Structural homoglycans • Cellulose ((14)Glc) • Chitin ((14)GlcNAc) • Others Carbohydrates

  42. Polysaccharides: heteroglycans Found in glycosaminoglycans (disaccharide units) Hyaluronic acid:GlcUA,GlcNAc) ((1  3,4)) Glycosylations of proteins Carbohydrates

  43. Storage polysaccharides • Sources of glucose for energy and carbon • Long-chain polymers of glucose • Starch (amylose and amylopectin) • in plants, it’s stored in 3-100 µm granules • Typically 70% amylopectin, but it varies with the plant from which it’s taken • Glycogen: animals, some bacteria • Branches found in all but amylose Carbohydrates

  44. Amylose (fig. 8.22) • Unbranched, a-14 linkages • Typically 100-3000 residues • Not soluble but can form hydrated micelles and may be helical • Amylases hydrolyze a-14 linkages Diagram courtesyLangara College Carbohydrates

  45. Amylopectin • Mostly a-14 linkages; 4% a-16 • Each sidechain has 15-25 glucose moieties • a-16 linkages broken down by debranching enzymes • Usually 300-50000 total glucose units per amylopectin molecule • One reducing end, many nonreducing ends Carbohydrates

  46. Glycogen • Principal storage form of glucose in human liver; some in muscle • Branched (a-14 + a few a-16) • More branches (~10%) • Often larger than starch: 50000 glucose • One reducing end,many nonreducing ends Carbohydrates

  47. Preview: glycogen metabolism Broken down to G-1-P units Built up fromG-6-P  G-1-P  UDP-Glucose units Carbohydrates

  48. Glycogen structure Carbohydrates

  49. Structural polysaccharides I • Insoluble compounds designed to provide strength and rigidity • Cellulose: glucose b-14 linkages • Chitin: GlcNAcb-14 linkages:exoskeletons, cell walls Carbohydrates

  50. Cellulose: details Rigid, flat structure: each glucose is upside down relative to its nearest neighbors 300-15000 glucose units Found in plant cell walls Resistant to most glucosidases Cellulases found in termites,ruminant gut bacteria Carbohydrates

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