Title: Carbohydrates and the Glycoconjugates of Cell Surfaces
1Chapter 7
- Carbohydrates and the Glycoconjugates of Cell
Surfaces -
- Biochemistry
- by
- Reginald Garrett and Charles Grisham
2Essential Question
- What is the structure, chemistry, and biological
function of carbohydrates? - (CH2O)n or (C H2O)n
- Breakdown of carbohydrates provides energy.
- Glycolipids and glycoproteins are glycoconjugates
involved in recognition between cell types or
recognition of cellular structures by other
molecules.
3Outlines
- How Are Carbohydrates Named?
- What Is the Structure and Chemistry of
Monosaccharides? - What is the Structure and Chemistry of
Oligosaccharides? - What is the Structure and Chemistry of
Polysaccharides? - What Are Glycoproteins, and How Do They Function
in Cells? - How Do Proteoglycans Modulate Processes in Cells
and Organisms?
47.1 How Are Carbohydrates Named?
- Carbohydrates are hydrates of carbon.
-
- Monosaccharides (simple sugars) cannot be broken
down into simpler sugars under mild conditions. - Oligo "a few" - usually 2 to 10
- Polysaccharides are polymers of the simple sugars.
57.2 What Is the Structure and Chemistry of
Monsaccharides?
- An organic chemistry review
-
- Aldoses and ketoses contain aldehyde and ketone
functions, respectively. - Triose, tetrose, etc. denotes number of carbons.
- Aldoses with 3C or more and ketoses with 4C or
more are chiral. - Review Fischer projections and D,L system.
6Stereochemistry Review
- Read text on p. 204-207 carefully!
- D,L designation refers to the configuration of
the highest-numbered asymmetric center. - D,L only refers the stereocenter of interest back
to D- and L-glyceraldehyde! - D,L do not specify the sign of rotation of
plane-polarized light! - All structures in Figures 7.2 and 7.3 are D.
- D-sugars predominate in nature.
7More Stereochemistry
- Know these definitions
- Stereoisomers that are mirror images of each
other are enantiomers. - Pairs of isomers that have opposite
configurations at one or more chiral centers but
are NOT mirror images are diastereomers. - Any 2 sugars in a row in Figures 7.2 and 7.3 are
diastereomers. - Two sugars that differ in configuration at only
one chiral center are epimers.
8Cyclic monsaccharide structures and anomeric forms
- Glucose (an aldose) can cyclize to form a cyclic
hemiacetal. - Fructose (a ketose) can cyclize to form a cyclic
hemiketal. - Cyclic form of glucose is mainly a pyranose.
- Cyclic form of fructose is mainly a furanose.
9Cyclic monsaccharide structures and anomeric forms
- Cyclic forms possess anomeric carbons.
- For D-sugars, ? has OH down, ? has OH up.
- For L-sugars, the reverse is true.
- Mutarotation The optical rotation of glucose
solution could change with time. It involves
interconversion of ?- and ?-D-glucose. - ?D20 112.2? for ?-D-glucose
- ?D20 18.7? for ?-D-glucose
10Monosaccharide Derivatives
- Reducing sugars sugars with free anomeric
carbons - they will reduce oxidizing agents, such
as peroxide, ferricyanide and certain metals
(Cu2 and Ag). - Fehlings reagent CuSO4 (blue) RC(O)H ?
Cu2O? (red) RCO2- - Tollens reagent Ag ? Ag0?
- These redox reactions convert the sugar to a
sugar acid. - Glucose is a reducing sugar --- so these
reactions are the basis for diagnostic tests for
blood sugar.
11More Monosaccharide Derivatives
- Sugar alcohols (alditols) sweet-tasting, from
mild reduction of sugars - Deoxy sugars constituents of DNA, etc.
- Sugar esters phosphate esters like ATP are
important. - Amino sugars contain an amino group in place of a
hydroxyl group. - Acetals, ketals and glycosides basis for oligo-
and poly-saccharides.
127.3 What is the Structure and Chemistry of
Oligosaccharides?
- Its not important to memorize structures, but
you should know the important features. - Be able to identify anomeric carbons and reducing
and nonreducing ends. - Sucrose is NOT a reducing sugar.
- Browse the structures in Figure 7.19 and Figure
7.20. - Note carefully the nomenclature of links! Be able
to recognize ?(1,4), ?(1,4), etc.
137.4 What is the Structure and Chemistry of
Polysaccharides?
- Functions storage, structure, recognition
- Nomenclature homopolysaccharide vs.
heteropolysaccharide. - Lower the osmotic pressure.
- Starch and glycogen are energy storage molecules.
- Chitin and cellulose are structural molecules.
- Cell surface polysaccharides are recognition
molecules.
14Starch
- A plant storage polysaccharide
- Two forms amylose and amylopectin
- Most starch is 10-30 amylose and 70-90
amylopectin. - Amylose has ?(1,4) links and one reducing end.
- Amylopectin has ?(1,6) branches in every 12-30
residues.
15Starch
- Amylose and amylopectin are poorly soluble in
water, but form micellar suspensions. - In these suspensions, amylose is helical and
iodine fits into the helices to produce a blue
color. Amylopectin produces a red-violet color
with I2. - Salivary ?-amylase, an endoamylase, is
?(1?4)-glucan 4-glucanhydrolase. - ?-amylase is an exoamylase, cleaving maltose
units. - ?(1?6)-glucosidase is required for complete
hydrolysis of amylopepctin.
16Why branching in Starch?
- Consider the phosphorylase reaction...
- Phosphorylase releases glucose-1-P, products from
the amylose or amylopectin chains. - The more branches, the more sites for
phosphorylase attack. - Branches provide a mechanism for quickly
releasing (or storing) glucose units for (or
from) metabolism.
17Glycogen
- --- the glucose storage device in animals
- Glycogen constitutes up to 10 of liver mass and
1-2 of muscle mass. - Glycogen is stored energy for the organism.
- Only difference from amylopectin number of
branches. - ?(1,6) branches every 8-12 residues .
- Like amylopectin, glycogen gives a red-violet
color with iodine. - Hydrolyzed by ?-, ?-amylase, and glycogen
phosphorylase.
18Dextrans
- A small but significant difference from starch
and glycogen. - If you change the main linkages between glucose
from ?(1,4) to ?(1,6), you get a new family of
polysaccharides dextrans. - Branches can be (1,2), (1,3), or (1,4).
- Dextrans formed by bacteria are components of
dental plaque. - Cross-linked dextrans are used as "Sephadex" gels
in column chromatography. - These gels are up to 98 water!
19Structural Polysaccharides
- Composition similar to storage polysaccharides,
but small structural differences greatly
influence properties. - Cellulose is the most abundant natural polymer on
earth. - Cellulose is the principal strength and support
of trees and plants . - Cellulose can also be soft and fuzzy - in cotton.
20Other Structural Polysaccharides
- Chitin - exoskeletons of crustaceans, insects and
spiders, and cell walls of fungi. - similar to cellulose, but C-2s are N-acetyl
- cellulose strands are parallel, chitins can be
parallel or antiparallel. - Alginates Ca2-binding polymers in algae.
- Agarose and agaropectin - galactose polymers
- Glycosaminoglycans - repeating disaccharides with
amino sugars and negative charges.
21Bacterial Cell Walls
- Composed of 1 or 2 bilayers and peptidoglycan
shell - To resist high internal osmotic pressure, to
maintain cell shape and size of bacteria. - Gram-positive One bilayer and thick
peptidoglycan outer shell. - Gram-negative Two bilayers with thin
peptidoglycan shell in between . - Gram-positive pentaglycine bridge connects
tetrapeptides. - Gram-negative direct amide bond between
tetrapeptides.
22More Notes on Cell Walls
- Note the ?-carboxy linkage of isoglutamate in the
tetrapeptide - Peptidoglycan is called murein - from Latin
"murus", for wall - Gram-negative cells are hairy! Note the
lipopolysaccharide "hair" in Figures 7.35 and
7.36.
23Cell Surface Polysaccharides
- A host of important functions!
- Animal cell surfaces contain an incredible
diversity of glycoproteins (on the dell surface)
and proteoglycans (in the extracellular matrix). - In glass dishes, heart myocytes beat and liver
cells avoid contact with kidney cells. Cancer
cells grow without contact inhibition. - These polysaccharide structures regulate
cell-cell recognition and interaction. They
contain several points for linkage (-OH) and are
more informative than linear proteins and nucleic
acids. - The uniqueness of the "information" in these
structures is determined by the enzymes that
synthesize these polysaccharides.
247.5 What Are Glycoproteins, and How Do They
Function in Cells?
- Many structures and functions!
- May be N-linked or O-linked.
- N-linked saccharides are attached via the amide
nitrogens of asparagine residues. - O-linked saccharides are attached to hydroxyl
groups of serine, threonine or hydroxylysine. - See structures in Figure 7.39
25O-linked Saccharides of Glycoproteins
- Function in many cases is to adopt an extended
and relatively rigid conformation. - These extended conformations resemble "bristle
brushes. - Bristle brush structure extends functional
domains up out of the glycocalyx. - See Figure 7.40
26N-linked Oligosaccharides
- Many functions known or suspected
- N-glycosylation of proteins can alter the
chemical and physical properties of proteins,
altering solubility, mass, and electrical
charges. - N-linked oligosaccharide moieties can (1)
stabilize protein conformations, (2) protect
against proteolysis and (3) promote correct
folding of certain globular proteins (p. 239). - Cleavage of monosaccharide units from N-linked
glycoproteins in blood targets them for
degradation in the liver. - see pages 238, 239
277.6 - Proteoglycans
- --- Glycoproteins whose carbohydrates are mostly
glycosaminoglycans. -
- Components of the cell membrane and glycocalyx.
- Consist of proteins with one or two types of
glycosaminoglycan. - See structures, Figure 7.44
287.6 How Do Proteoglycans Modulate Processes in
Cells and Organisms?
- Proteoglycans are glycoproteins whose
carbohydrate moieties are predominantly
glycosaminoglycans. - Example syndecan - transmembrane protein -
inside domain interacts with cytoskeleton,
outside domain interacts with fibronectin. - Highly sulfated glycosaminoglycans bind specific
proteins (e.g. fibronectin) at sites containing
basic amino acid residues. (charge interactions) - A particular pentasaccharide sequence in heparin
finds to antithrombin III. (sequence-specific)
29Proteoglycan Functions
- Modulation of cell growth processes
- Binding of growth factor proteins by
proteoglycans in the glycocalyx provides a
reservoir of growth factors at the cell surface. - Cushioning in joints
- Cartilage matrix proteoglycans absorb large
amounts of water. During joint movement,
cartilage is compressed, expelling water!