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AP Biology Carbohydrates
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AP Biology 2006-2007 OH H H HO CH 2 OH H H H OH O Carbohydrates energy molecules
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AP Biology Carbohydrates Carbohydrates are composed of C, H, O carbo - hydr - ate CH 2 O (CH 2 O) x C 6 H 12 O 6 Function: energy u energy storage raw materials u structural materials Monomer: sugars ex: sugars, starches, cellulose sugar C 6 H 12 O 6 (CH 2 O) x
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AP Biology Photosynthetic Organisms Photosynthetic bacteria Cyanobacteria Protists Spirogyra Plants All are photosynthetic
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AP Biology Monosaccharides Most names for sugars end in -ose Classified by number of carbons 6C = hexose (glucose) 5C = pentose (ribose) 3C = triose (glyceraldehyde) OH H H HO CH 2 OH H H H OH O Glucose H OH HO O H H H Ribose CH 2 OH Glyceraldehyde H H H H OH O C C C 653
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AP Biology Functional groups determine function carbonyl ketone aldehyde carbonyl
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AP Biology Sugar structure 5C & 6C sugars form rings in solution Carbons are numbered Where do you find solutions in biology? In cells!
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AP Biology Numbered carbons C CC C C C 1' 2'3' 4' 5' 6' O energy stored in C-C bonds
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AP Biology Simple & complex sugars Monosaccharides simple 1 monomer sugars glucose Disaccharides 2 monomers sucrose Polysaccharides large polymers starch OH H H HO CH 2 OH H H H OH O Glucose
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AP Biology C 6 H 12 O 6 Fructose fruit sugar converted from glucose – sweetener in honey Galactose Dairy sugar, component of lactose, necessary for mammals that are mothers
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AP Biology Polysaccharide diversity Molecular structure determines function isomers of glucose structure determines function… in starchin cellulose
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AP Biology Glucose α – glucose β – glucose Cannot bond w/ eachother b/c OH + H does not leave anything behind Alpha w/ Alpha Beta/ Beta We can’t break down cellulose b.c we don’t have the enzyme
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AP Biology Alpha Beta
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AP Biology Building sugars Dehydration synthesis Dehydration synthesis glycosidic linkage | glucose | glucose monosaccharidesdisaccharide | maltose H2OH2O
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AP Biology Building sugars Dehydration synthesis | fructose | glucose monosaccharides | sucrose (table sugar) disaccharide H2OH2O
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AP Biology Dissaccharide C 12 H 22 O 11 Maltose – α-glucose + α- glucose α-1,4 glycosidic linkage Found in plant seeds – energy source Sucrose α-glucose + fructose Lactose α-glucose + galactose Milk sugar Lactose intolerant – lacking lactase α-1,4 glycosidic linkage
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AP Biology Polysaccharides Polymers of sugars costs little energy to build easily reversible = release energy Function: (do not copy below - wait til next slide energy storage starch (plants) glycogen (animals) in liver & muscles structure cellulose (plants) chitin (arthropods & fungi)
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AP Biology energy storage 1.Starch Amylose (30% of starch) α-1,4 glycosidic linkage Amylopectin (70%) α-1,4 and every 30ish glucose units 1,6 glycosidic linkage Store in amyloplasts
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AP Biology 2. Glycogen (Animal starch) Humans/animals store in muscle cells and liver Chains of branching α-glucose (lots of branches)
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AP Biology Linear vs. branched polysaccharides starch (plant) glycogen (animal) energy storage What does branching do? slow release fast release
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AP Biology structure 3. Cellulose Primary component of cell walls Cotton and Paper are purely cellulose Chain of β glucose - β -1,4 glycosidic linkage Humans do not have enzymes to break down cellulose
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AP Biology Digesting starch vs. cellulose starch easy to digest enzyme cellulose hard to digest
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AP Biology Cellulose Most abundant organic compound on Earth herbivores have evolved a mechanism to digest cellulose most carnivores have not that’s why they eat meat to get their energy & nutrients cellulose = undigestible roughage But it tastes like hay! Who can live on this stuff?!
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Regents Biology Cow can digest cellulose well; no need to eat other sugars Gorilla can’t digest cellulose well; must add another sugar source, like fruit to diet
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Regents Biology Helpful bacteria How can herbivores digest cellulose so well? BACTERIA live in their digestive systems & help digest cellulose-rich (grass) meals Ruminants Tell me about the rabbits, again, George! I eat WHAT! Caprophage
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AP Biology 4. Chitin Exoskeletons of arthropods/ fungal cell walls β -1,4 glycosidic linkage w/ amine chains
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Regents Biology 2006-2007 Let’s build some Carbohydrates! EAT X
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