VBC 211 First Lecture
VBC 211 First Lecture
VBC 211 First Lecture
BIOCHEMISTRY OF
CARBOHYDRATES
1
Carbohydrates are the most abundant organic
compounds on earth.
2
Complex storage carbohydrates include starch in
plants, and glycogen in animals.
A normal large dog, for example:
100 gm of glucose stored as liver glycogen,
250 gm as muscle glycogen,
25 gm as adipose tissue glycogen,
10 gm as free glucose in the extracellular fluid
compartments.
3
At rest, between 160-200 gm of glucose are
metabolized per day, with the brain being the
major consumer (~~120 gm/day).
4
Carbohydrates
Structure and Biological Function
5
Carbohydrates
Classified based on
• Size of base carbon chain
• Number of sugar units
• Location of C=O
• Stereochemistry
6
Types of carbohydrates
7
The word saccharide is derived from the Greek
“Sakcharon” meaning “Sugar”
8
Monosaccharides
10
Hexoses of glucose, fructose, and galactose are
physiologically the most important.
Glucose is a major mammalian fuel, found widely in
fruits and vegetables as a monosaccharide, in
disaccharides such as sucrose, maltose, and
lactose, and in polysaccharides such as glycogen
and starch.
11
It is converted to other carbohydrates having highly
specific functions (e.g., glycogen for storage, ribose in
nucleic acids, galactose in lactose of milk, in certain
complex lipids, and in combination with protein in
glycoproteins).
12
Fructose is a 6-carbon ketose found in fruit and
honey as a monosaccharide, and in sucrose (a
disaccharide of fructose and glucose).
13
In some animals a significant amount of fructose resulting
from the digestion of sucrose is converted to glucose in
the intestinal wall prior to passage into the portal
circulation.
Free fructose is found in seminal plasma, and is secreted
in quantity into the fetal circulation of ungulates and
whales, where it accumulates in amniotic and allantoic
fluids. In all of these situations, free fructose represents
a potential source of fuel.
14
Galactose is a component of lactose (milk sugar), which is
synthesized in mammary glands.
Galactose is found in some vegetable polysaccharides, and
is convertible to glucose in the body (mainly in the liver
where it is almost entirely removed from the portal
circulation following absorption from the intestine).
Galactose also forms part of the polysaccharide chain of
many glycoproteins
15
Monosaccharides
Aldose Ketose
- aldehyde C=O - ketone C=O
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Monosaccharide classifications
CH2OH
|
C=O
H |
| HO-C-H
C=O |
| H-C-OH
H-C-OH |
| H-C-OH
|
CH2OH
CH2OH
D-glyceraldehyde D-fructose
triose hexose
aldose ketose
aldotriose sugar ketohexose sugar
18
Examples
H
|
H C=O
| |
C=O H-C-OH
| |
H-C-OH H-C-OH
| |
H-C-OH HO-C-H
| |
H-C-OH HO-C-H
| |
CH2OH CH2OH
D-ribose L-mannose
pentose, aldose hexose, aldose
aldopentose sugar aldohexose sugar
19
Stereoisomers
Stereochemistry
Study of the spatial arrangement of molecules.
Stereoisomers have
• the same order and types of bonds.
• different spatial arrangements.
• different properties.
Many biologically important chemicals, like sugars, exist
as stereoisomers.
20
Enantiomers
Pairs of stereoisomers
Designated by D- or L- at the start of the name.
They are mirror images that can’t be overlapped.
22
L- and D- glyceraldehyde
CHO CHO
HO H H OH
C C
CH2 OH CH2 OH
CHO CHO
HO H H OH
CH2 OH CH2 OH
23
Enantiomers
Chiral center.
Asymmetric carbon - 4 different things are
attached to it.
Cl
|
I- C - F
| Chiral center
Br
You must have at least one asymmetric carbon to
have stereoisomers.
24
Enantiomer are stereoisomers that are
mirror images of each other that are non-
superposable (not identical), much as one's
left and right hands are the same except for
opposite orientation
25
Sterioisomers: Sterioisomers are a subset of
isomers.
26
Epimers
27
Examples
H
|
H C=O HH H
|
H3C-C-OH H-C-OH H2N-C-C-C-SH
H | ClH Cl
CH2OH
28
Physical properties
Optical activity
ability to rotate plane polarized light.
31
D-glyceraldehyde
32
D-glucose
• Glucose is an aldohexose sugar.
• Common names include dextrose, grape O
H
sugar, blood sugar. C
H C OH
• Most important sugar in our diet.
HO C H
• Most abundant organic compound H C OH
found in nature. H C OH
• CH2OH
Level in blood can be as high as 0.1%
33
D-fructose
CH2OH
Another common sugar. |
C=O
|
HO-C-H
It is a ketohexose. |
H-C-OH
|
H-C-OH
Sweetest of all sugars. |
CH2OH
34
Carbohydrates in cyclic structures
R
OR’’
\ |
C=O + ROH R-C
- OH
/ | 35
36
37
Intramolecular cyclization
Cyclization.
Remember - chains can bend and rotate.
CH2OH CH2OH
H
C OH C O
C C O C C OH
C C C C
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Intramolecular cyclization
39
Cyclization of D-glucose
CH2OH -D - glucose
H O H
H
O OH H
H
C OH OH
H C OH H OH
HO C H
H C OH CH2OH - D - glucose
H C OH H O OH
H
CH2OH OH H
OH H
H OH
40
Fischer vs. Haworth projections
-D-glucose
H C OH CH2OH
H C OH H O H
H
HO C H O H
OH
H C OH OH OH
HO-CH C H
2 H OH
41
Cyclization of D-fructose
45
Reactions of glucose
and other monosaccharides
Oxidation-Reduction. Required for their complete
metabolic breakdown.
Esterification. Production of phosphate esters.
Amino derivatives. Used to produce structural
components and glycoprotein.
Glycoside formation. Linkage of monosaccharides to
form polysaccharides.
46
Oxidation-Reduction.
Aldehyde sugars (reducing sugars) are readily oxidized and will
react with Benedict’s reagent.
H O-
| |
C=O C=O
2+
| + 2 Cu + 5 OH- | + 2 Cu2O + 3H2O
H-C-OH H-C-OH
| |
CH2OH CH2OH
This provides a good test for presence of glucose in urine -
forms a red precipitate.
Other tests - Tollen’s or Fehling’s solutions.
47
Benedict’s reagent
glu c o s e
0.5% 2%
B e n e dic t's
Re a g e n t
48
Ketone sugars
O O
R OH + C R' R O C R' + H2O
HO
50
Esterification
51
Amino derivatives
H O OH H O OH
H H
OH H OH H
OH H OH H
H OH H NH2
-D-glucose -D-2-aminoglucose
(glucosamine)
52
Amino derivatives
53
Glycoside formation
H O OH H O H
glycosidic bond H
OH H H
H
OH
OH H OH OH
H OH OH H
sugar -O- sugar
CH2OH
CH2OH H O H
oxygen bridge H
H
O
o
H
H
OH
OH H OH
OH H
OH H
H OH
+ H2 O
54
Glycosidic bonds
bonds bonds
O O
O O
56
Glycosidic bonds
(
OH type carbon# of
( or ) first sugar
carbon# of
second sugar )
As we work through the next few examples
this will become clear.
58
Trehalose, which contains two molecules of glucose
linked together somewhat differently from maltose, is a
major carbohydrate found in the hemolymph of many
insects. It is also found in young mushrooms, where it
accounts for about 1.5% of their weight.
Cellobiose, the repeating disaccharide unit of cellulose,
has β-(1,4) glycosidic linkages which are broken by
bacterial cellulases, but not by mammalian constitutive
digestive enzymes.
59
Lactose is found in milk, but otherwise does not
occur in nature. It consists of galactose and
glucose in a β -(1,4) glycosidic linkage.
60
Sucrose, or cane sugar, consists of glucose and
fructose linked in an a-(1,2) glycosidic bond. It is
abundant in the plant world, and is familiar as
table sugar.
61
Hydrolysis of sucrose to glucose and fructose is
sometimes called inversion, since it is accompanied
by a net change in optical rotation from dextro to
levo as the equimolar mixture of glucose and
fructose is formed on the mucosal surface.
62
63
-Maltose
H O H H O OH
H H
OH H OH H
O H
OH
H OH H OH
-D-glucose -D-glucose
CH2OH CH2OH
H O H H O OH
H H
OH H OH H
O H
OH
H OH H OH
65
-Maltose
Uses of -maltose
Ingredient in infant formulas.
Production of beer.
Flavoring - fresh baked aroma.
66
Cellobiose
CH2OH
H O OH
H
CH2OH OH H
H
H O O
H
H OH
OH H
OH H
H OH
67
Cellobiose
CH 2 OH CH 2 OH
H O H H O OH
H
The difference in H
OH H OH H
the linkage results OH
O H
in cellobiose H OH H OH
being unusable maltose, (1 4)
CH2OH
O OH
We lack an enzyme H
H
H
that can hydrolyze CH2OH OH
H
O O
cellobiose. H
H
H OH
OH H
OH H cellobiose
H OH (1 4)
68
Lactose
H OH H OH
-D-galactose -D-glucose
(1 4) linkage, disaccharide.
69
Lactose
Lactase
Enzyme required to hydrolyze lactose.
Lactose intolerance
Lack or insufficient amount of the enzyme.
71
Sucrose
CH2OH
Table sugar - most
common sugar in all H O H
plants. H
OH H
Sugar cane and beet, are up
to 20% by mass sucrose. OH
Disaccharide of - H OH
O
glucose and -
fructose. CH2OH O
H OH
H CH2OH
(1 2) linkage OH H
72
Sucrose
glucose
fructose
73
How sweet it is!
Sweetness relative
Sugar to sucrose
lactose 0.16
galactose 0.32
maltose 0.33
sucrose 1.00
fructose 1.73
aspartame 180
saccharin 450
74
Trisaccharide
75
Polysaccharides
Carbohydrate polymers
Storage Polysaccharides
Energy storage - starch and glycogen
Structural Polysaccharides
Used to provide protective walls or
lubricative coating to cells - cellulose and
mucopolysaccharides.
Structural Peptidoglycans
Bacterial cell walls
76
Starch
77
Starch, the glucose store of plants, is an
important food source of carbohydrate, and
is found in cereals, potatoes, legumes, and
other vegetables. Starch contains 15 to 20%
amylose, and 80-85% amylopectin. While
both glycogen and starch consist totally of
D-glucose, amylose is nonbranched, and
amylopectin contains about one a-1,6
branch per 30 α-1,4 linkages.
78
Amylose starch
O O O
O
H OH H OH H OH
H OH
O O O
O
O O O O
O O O O
O O O O O
O O O
O O O
O
79
Amylose starch
80
Amylopectin starch
O O H H O H
H O H H H H
H H H
H OH H
OH H OH H OH H
O O O
O
H OH H OH H OH
H OH
(1 6) linkage
at crosslink
81
Glycogen
at crosslink
O
O
c
O
O
c O
O
O
O
O
82
Glycogen, the form in which animal tissues
store glucose, has a basic structure that
consists of numerous α-1,4 linked D-
Glucose molecules, and is sometimes
referred to as“ animal starch".
CH2OH
CH2OH O
H
CH2OH O H
H O
CH2OH O H OH H
H O
CH2OH O H OH H H
H O
O H OH H H
H O
OH H H OH
H O H
OH H H OH
H
H OH
H
H OH
H OH
84
Cellulose is insoluble in water, and consists
of long, non-branched β-1,4 linked glucose
units strengthened by cross-linked
hydrogen bonds.
85
However, in the digestive tracts of
herbivores, cellulase-containing microbes
attack the β-linkages, thus making the
glucose units of cellulose available as major
metabolic entities for the microbes.
86
This process also takes place (to a limited
extent) by microbes in the colons of
omnivores and carnivores. Fungi and
protozoa secrete cellulases, and the
digestion of wood by termites depends on
protozoa in their digestive tract.
Cellulose, containing over 50% of the
carbon in plant material, is the most
abundant organic compound on earth.
87
Chitin is a key structural polysaccharide
of invertebrates found, for example, in the
exoskeletons of crustaceans and insects.
89
This polysaccharide, unlike plant starch, is
easily soluble in warm water, and has been
used in clinical evaluation of kidney
function.
Inulin is freely filtered by the kidneys, it is
not reabsorbed or secreted by the nephron,
it is not metabolized following injection into
blood, it is nontoxic, and therefore its
clearance from the circulation closely
approximates the glomerular filtration rate
(GFR). 90
Dextrins are substances formed in the
course of hydrolytic breakdown of starch
and glycogen in the digestive tract, by
the action of salivary and pancreatic
amylase.
COO-
OH H Alternating units of
O H NH
O
H
HO
H
C O N-acetylglucosamine and
CH3
H OH
H
D-glucuronic acid.
92
Structural peptidoglycans
Bacterial cell walls are composed primarily of an unbranched
polymer of alternating units of N-acetylglucosamine and N-
acetylmuramic acid.
CH3
CH2OH CH2OH
H O H O O R= CH
H H
OH H O OR H
O H H O L-Ala
H NH H NH D-Isoglu
C O C O
(Gly)5 L-Lys
CH3 CH3
D-Ala
94
Glycoprotein structure
95
Glycoprotein structure
Linking sugars to proteins. threonine
polypeptide chain
H H
H NHCOCH3
H NHCOCH3
96
Glycosaminoglycans
(mucopolysaccharides)
Consist or characterized by their content of
amino sugars and uronic acids. When these
chains are attached to a protein, the
compound is known as a proteoglycan.
100
Heparan sulfate is negatively charged, and
participates in cell growth and cell-cell
communication.
It is also found in the basement membrane
of the glomerulus, where it plays a major
role in determining the charge
selectiveness of the renal glomerular
filtration barrier.
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