carbohydrates

Cards (37)

  • Monomers are small identical or similar molecules, which can be joined together to make larger molecules called polymers.
  • Polymers are large molecules made from joining many identical or similar molecules together.
  • Monomers are joined by condensation bonds. A condensation reaction joins two monomer units together with the removal of one water molecule.
  • Polymers are broken down by hydrolysis reactions. This involves adding one molecule of water to break the bond between two monomers.
  • Elements found in carbohydrates are carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen.
  • Carbohydrates have twice as many hydrogen atoms as oxygen atoms.
  • Carbohydrates are made of monomers called monosaccharides. These can join together to create a range of different carbohydrates (known as disaccharides or polysacchrides)
  • Glucose formular: C6H12O6
  • 3 main monosaccharides:
    • glucose
    • galactose
    • fructose
  • alpha and beta glucose differ in the position of the OH and H groups on carbon one.
  • two monosaccharides can join together in a condensation reaction. This forms a disaccharide
  • disaccharides all have the formula:
    C12H22O11
  • a glycosidic bond is formed between two monosaccharides by the condensation of two water molecules
  • hydrolysis is the breaking of a chemical bond between two molecules by the addition of a water molecule
  • glucose + glucose --> maltose + water
  • galactose + glucose --> lactose + water
  • fructose + glucose --> sucrose + water
  • a polysaccharide is a polymer of monosaccharides joined. one example is starch. they are all large, insoluble, and not sweet
  • monosaccharides and disaccharides are small, sweet, and soluble
  • starch is split into amylose and amylopectin
  • amylopectin has a higher surface area as it has branched molecules
  • starch is found in the starch grain in plant cells
  • starch is insoluable so doesn't affect the water potential
  • amylose is coiled so can fit many molecules in a small area
  • glycogen is made from alpha glucose
  • glycogen has branched molecules and a large surface area
  • glycogen is used as a glucose storage in animals
  • cellulose is made from beta glucose
  • cullulose is straight, unbranched chains, running parallel
  • cellulose has many hydrogen bonds between chains, making it strong
  • monosaccharides are soluble and sweet-tasting
  • hexose sugars have 6 carbons
  • monosaccharides general formula is (CH2O)n
  • properties of glucose:
    • small so easily transported in and out of cells through carrier proteins
    • soluble so easily transported around an organism
    • less reactive than other monosaccharides so breakdown must be catalysed and therefore controlled by enzymes
  • alpha glucose forms amylose
  • beta glucose forms cellulose
  • alpha glucose has the OH on the bottom, whereas beta glucose has the OH on the top