chem carbs

Cards (239)

  • Carbohydrates
    • Most abundant class of organic compounds in the plant world
    • Account for 75% of dry plant material and are produced by photosynthesis
    • Act as storehouses of chemical energy (glucose, starch, glycogen)
    • Components of supportive structures in plants (cellulose), crustacean shells (chitin), connective tissues in animals (acidic polysaccharides), essential components of nucleic acids (D-ribose and 2-deoxy-D-ribose)
    • Average human diet contains 2/3 of carbohydrates
  • Carbohydrate
    Hydrate of carbon, derived from the formula Cn(H2O)m
  • Carbohydrates
    • Glucose (blood sugar): C6H12O6
    • Sucrose (table sugar): C12H22O11
  • Carbohydrate
    • Polymer of polyhydroxy aldehydes, a polyhydroxy ketones, or a compound that produces such substances upon hydrolysis
    • Also called "saccharide" from the latin word saccharum meaning sweet taste or sugar
  • Classifications of Carbohydrates by number of carbons
    • Triose - 3 carbon atoms
    • Tetrose - 4 carbon atoms
    • Pentose - 5 carbon atoms
    • Hexose - 6 carbon atoms
  • Aldose
    Carbonyl group is at the end of the chain and represents an aldehyde group
  • Ketose
    Carbonyl group occurs within the chain and represents a ketone group
  • Monosaccharides
    • D-Aldoses
    • D-Ketoses
  • Monosaccharide
    Simplest unit of a carbohydrate, contains a single polyhydroxy aldehyde or polyhydroxy ketone unit, cannot be broken down into simpler units by hydrolysis reactions, also called simple sugars (glucose, fructose and galactose)
  • Disaccharide
    Consists of two monosaccharide units joined together by a glycosidic bond, commonly crystalline and water soluble (sucrose and lactose)
  • Oligosaccharide
    Contains ~3-10 monosaccharide units covalently bonded to each other, free oligosaccharides are seldom encountered in biochemical systems, associated with proteins and lipids for structural and regulatory functions
  • Polysaccharide
    Long polymers of monosaccharide units covalently bonded to each other (cellulose, starch, glycogen)
  • Reducing Sugar
    Sugar that reduces Ag+ in the Tollen's test or Cu2+ in the Fehling's or Benedict's test, has a free aldehyde group or is in hemiacetal form (all monosaccharides, lactose and maltose)
  • Nonreducing Sugar
    No free aldehyde group, negative for Tollen's, Fehling's or Benedict's test (sucrose and all polysaccharides)
  • Pyranose
    Forms a pyran ring upon cyclization
  • Furanose
    Forms a furan ring upon cyclization
  • In all D-monosaccharides, the CH2OH is above the ring
  • The -OH represented to the right of the chain in a Fischer projection is shown below the ring in Haworth projections</b>
  • The most stable conformation for most sugars is the chair conformation
  • Mutarotation
    Interconversion between the alpha and beta anomers of a monosaccharide
  • Chiral Center
    An atom in a molecule that has four different groups bonded to it, making the molecule optically active
  • Almost all monosaccharides are right-handed, while amino acids are always left-handed
  • Enantiomers
    Stereoisomers whose molecules are nonsuperimposable mirror images of each other (D and L forms)
  • Diastereomers
    Stereoisomers that are not exact mirror images
  • Epimers
    Diastereomers whose molecules differ only in the configuration at one chiral center (e.g. D-mannose and D-glucose, D-glucose and D-galactose)
  • Enantiomers
    Stereoisomers whose molecules are nonsuperimposable mirror images of each other (D and L)
  • Carbohydrates and amino acids are chiral
  • Humans can only metabolize the D-isomers of monosaccharides
  • Most animals are only able to utilize the L-isomers of amino acids to synthesize proteins
  • Epimers
    Diastereomers whose molecules differ only in the configuration at one chiral center
    1. Glyceraldehyde and Dihydroxyacetone
    Simplest of the monosaccharides, important intermediates in the process of glycolysis
    1. Glucose
    Most abundant in nature, most important source of human nutrition, found in grape fruit and ripe fruits (20–30% by mass), also called Dextrose and Blood sugar (70–100 mg/dL), Diabetics have difficulty getting glucose from the bloodstream into their cells so that glycolysis can occur
    1. Galactose
    Combined with glucose in the disaccharide lactose, which is present in milk and other dairy products, synthesized in human beings, also called brain sugar, part of brain and nerve tissue, used to differentiate between blood types, six-membered cyclic form
    1. Fructose
    The ketose fructose is also referred to as fruit sugar or levulose, fructose is the sweetest monosaccharide, one and a half times sweeter than table sugar
    1. Ribose
    Part of a variety of complex molecules which include RNA, ATP, DNA, five-membered cyclic form
    1. Mannose
    Mannose is a monosaccharide found most notably in cranberries, it is not easily absorbed by the body, mannose has been shown to be effective against urinary tract infections (UTIs)
  • Amino Sugar
    Contains an -NH2 group in place of an -OH group (D-glucosamine, D-mannosamine, D-galactosamine)
  • Deoxysugar
    An important component of nucleic acid
  • Sugar Phosphates
    Conversion of glucose to glucose 6-P, first step in glycolysis (metabolism of monosaccharide)
  • Sugar Alcohol (Alditol)
    Undergo reduction reaction, the carbonyl group of a monosaccharide can be reduced to hydroxyl group