Title: Macromolecules & Carbohydrates
1Macromolecules Carbohydrates
- Lecture 3
- Dr. Mamoun Ahram
2Cell's weight
3Subunits
- Subunits the small building blocks (precursors)
used to make macromolecules - Macromolecules large molecules made of subunits
4Macromolecules
- Carbohydrates (monosaccharides)
- Proteins (amino acids)
- Nucleic acids (nucleotides)
- Lipids (fatty acids)
- Except for lipids, these macromolecules are also
considered polymers
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6Relationship (monomers and polymers)
7How water is removed?
- Mechanism 1 One subunit contributes an H and
the other subunit contributes an OH - Mechanism 2 One subunit contributes 2 H the
other subunit contributes an O
8Carbohydrates
9What are they?
- Carbohydrates are polyhydroxy aldehydes or
ketones - Saccharide is another name for a carbohydrate
10Functions
- Source of energy
- Structure (cellulose and chitin)
- Building blocks
- Cellular recognition
11Classification I
- Monosaccharides
- Disaccharides
- Oligosaccharides
- Polysaccharides
12Monosaccharides
- Basic chemical formula (CH2O)n
- They contain two or more hydroxyl groups
13Drawing sugars
- Fisher projections or perspective structural
formulas
Forward Backward Top (C1) Most highly
oxidized C
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16Numbering carbonsagain
17Classification 2
- By the number of carbon atoms they contain
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20Trioses
21Glyceraldehyde
Chiral carbon
22Mirror images and non-superimposable,
thenstereoisomers
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24Stereoisomers
25This is different than structural isomers
26Sugar enantiomers (D- vs. L-)
27Which chiral carbon?
28Number of possible stereoisomers
- 2n (n is the number of chiral carbons in a sugar
molecule)
29Isomers of glucose
30Diastereomers
31Epimers
32Formation of a ring structure
33Hemiacetal vs. hemiketal
34Haworth vs. Fischer projections
35Ring structures
36Example
37Anomers
38?- vs. ?-glucopyranose
39Cyclic fructose
40Galactose
41Fischer vs. HaworthLeft-right vs. up-down
42Cyclic aldohexoses
43Cyclic ribofuranose
44Modified sugars
45Sugar esters (esterification)
- What is the reacting functional group? Where does
it react? What are the end products? Where are
they used?
46Sugar acids (oxidation)
- Where is it oxidized? What does it form?
47Example 1
48Example 2
49Example 3
50Note
- Oxidation of ketoses to carboxylic acids does not
occur
51Sugar alcohols (reduction)
- What does it form?
- Examples include sorbitol, mannitol, and xylitol,
which are used to sweeten food products
52Deoxy sugars
- One or more hydroxyl groups are replaced by
hydrogens - An example is 2-deoxy-2-ribose, which is a
constituent of DNA
53N-glycosides
- What is the reacting functional group? Where does
it react? What are the end products? Where are
they used? - Examples nucleotides (DNA and RNA)
54Amino sugars
- What is the reacting functional group? Where does
it react? What are the end products? Where are
they used? - Further modification by acetylation
55O-Glycosides
- What is the reacting functional group? Where does
it react? What are the end products? Where are
they used?
56Formation of full acetal
57Disaccharides
- What are disaccharide? Oligosaccharides? Hetero-
vs. homo-? - What is the type of reaction?
- What is a residue?
- Synthesizing enzymes are glycosyltransferases
- Do they undergo mutarotation?
- Are products stable?
58Distinctions of disaccharides
- The 2 specific sugar monomers involved and their
stereoconfigurations (D- or L-) - The carbons involved in the linkage (C-1, C-2,
C-4, or C-6) - The order of the two monomer units, if different
(example galactose followed by glucose) - The anomeric configuration of the OH group on
carbon 1 of each residue (a or ß)
59Abundant disaccharides
- Configuration
- Designation
- Naming (common vs. systematic)
- Reducing vs. non-reducing
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62Raffinose
- What are oligosaccharide?
- Example raffinose
- It is found in peas and beans
- Homework
- What are the names of monosaccharides that make
up raffinose? - What is the monosaccharide that is attached to
what disaccharide?
63Oligosaccharides as drugs
- Streptomycin and erythromycin (antibiotics)
- Doxorubicin (cancer chemotherapy)
- Digoxin (cardiovascular disease)
64Polysaccharides
- What are polysaccharides?
- Homopolysaccharide (homoglycan) vs.
heteropolysaccharides
65Features of polysaccharides
- Monosaccharides
- Length
- Branching
66Storage polysaccharides
67Glycogen
- Which organisms? Which organs?
68Structure
69Starch
- Which organisms?
- Forms
- amylase (10-20)
- amylopectin (80-90)
70Dextran
- A storage polysaccharide
- Yeast and bacteria
- ?-(1-6)-D-glucose with branched chains
- Branches 1-2, 1-3, or 1-4
71Structural polysaccharides
72Cellulose
- Which organism?
- Degradation?
73Structural features? Why?
74Glycosaminoglycans
- What are they? Where are they located?
- Derivatives of an amino sugar, either glucosamine
or galactosamine - At least one of the sugars in the repeating unit
has a negatively charged carboxylate or sulfate
group
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76Localization and function of GAG
77Bond orientation
- Glycosidic bonds in chondroitin 4-sulfate,
hyaluronate, dermatan sulfate, and keratan
sulfate are alternating ? (1?3) and ?(1?4)
linkages - Exception is heparin
78Proteoglycans
- Lubricants
- Structural components in connective tissue
- Mediate adhesion of cells to the extracellular
matrix - Bind factors that stimulate cell proliferation
79Bacterial cell wall
80Glycoproteins
- Soluble proteins as well as membrane proteins
- Purpose
- Protein folding
- Protein targeting
- prolonging protein half-life
- Cell-cell communication
- Signaling
81Blood typing
- Three different structures
- A, B, and O
- The difference
- N-acetylgalactosamine (for A)
- Galactose (for B)
- None (for O)
82Sialic acid
- N-acetylneuraminate, (N-acetylneuraminic acid,
also called sialic acid) is derived from the
amino sugar, neuraminic acid and is often found
as a terminal residue of oligosaccharide chains
of glycoproteins giving glycoproteins negative