Sugars/polysaccharides

Cards (34)

  • what are the 2 types of starch
    Amylose
    amylopectin
  • what are the polysaccharides of glucose
    Cellulose
    glycogen
    starch (amylose, amylopectin)
  • what is the monomer in cellulose
    Beta glucose
  • what bonds are there in cellulose
    Beta 1-4 glycocidic bonds Hydrogen bonds also form between layered strands to give it strength
  • Structure of cellulose
    there is a chain of beta glucose
    ribbon strand-layer of a microfibril
    the whole structure is known as microfibrils
  • monomer of glycogen
    Alpha glucose
  • What type of monomer is B glucose?
    B glucose is a glucose monomer.
  • What type of bonds form within layered strands of B glucose to provide strength?
    Hydrogen bonds form within layered strands of B glucose.
  • What type of bonds connect the chains of B glucose?
    B1-4 glycosidic bonds connect the chains of B glucose.
  • What is the structure of a microfibril made from B glucose?
    • Composed of chains of B glucose
    • Linked by B1-4 glycosidic bonds
    • Strengthened by hydrogen bonds within layered strands
  • What is the term used to describe the layered structure formed by B glucose strands?
    Gribbon strand is the term used for the layered structure.
  • What type of bonds form within layered strands to provide strength?
    Hydrogen bonds
  • what bonds are in glycogen
    Alpha 1-6 and alpha 1-4 glycosidic bonds
  • What is the diagram that represents the structure of microfibrils called?

    It is referred to as a microfibril diagram.
  • What is the significance of hydrogen bonds in layered strands?
    They provide strength to the structure
  • Structure of glycogen
    Very branched
    very energy dense
  • What is the relationship between B glucose and glycocidic bonds?
    B glucose forms B1-4 glycocidic bonds
  • What is the structure formed by the chain of B glucose and glycocidic bonds?
    A microfibril
  • How do microfibrils relate to the overall structure mentioned in the study material?
    Microfibrils are formed from the layered strands of B glucose
  • What does the term "increased strength" refer to in the context of glycogen?
    It refers to the structural integrity and energy storage capability of glycogen
  • What are the key components of the structure formed by B glucose and glycocidic bonds?
    • B glucose molecules
    • B1-4 glycocidic bonds
    • Layered strands
    • Microfibrils
  • why does glycogen have an increased proportion of alpha 1-6 glycosidic bonds?
    Glycogen has an increased proportion of alpha 1-6 glycosidic bonds so it is far more branched so it is more rapidly hydrolysed
  • which is more rapidly hydrolysed?
    amylose or amylopectin
    Due to the branching of amylopectin it is more rapidly hydrolysed by amylase then amylose
  • Monomer of amylopectin
    alpha glucose
  • What types of bonds are in amylopectin
    amylopectin contains both alpha 1-4 and alpha 1-6 glycosidic bonds
  • What is the structure of amylopectin?
    The alpha 1-4 glycosidic bonds form linear straight chain branches
    the alpha 1-6 glycosidic bonds form the branch points
  • Monomer of amylose
    Alpha glucose
  • What bonds are in amylose
    Alpha 1-4 glycosidic bonds
  • Structure of amylose
    Amylose is a straight chain of starch which coils. it can be considered as linear-hilear
  • What is a monosaccharid?
    a single sugar unit and are the building blocks for more complex carbohydrate molecules (disaccharides and polysaccharide)
  • Formula for monosaccharides
    (CH2O)N
    where n is between 3-9
  • Examples of monosaccharides
    Fructose
    glucose
    galactose
  • What are disaccharides?
    Double sugar units that include: sucrose, maltose and lactose
  • polysaccharides
    Storage:glycogen, starch
    structural:cellulose