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Biochemistry Sixth Edition
Berg • Tymoczko • Stryer Chapter 11: Carbohydrates Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company
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Carbohydrates Common terms
Monosaccharides: glucose, fructose, mannose, etc. Disaccharides: maltose, cellibiose, sucrose, lactose Polysaccharides: starch, glycogen, chitin, glycosaminoglycans Aldoses, ketoses Pentoses, hexoses Pyranose, furanose Anomeric carbon atom, anomers, a, b D,L isomers, epimers, penultimate carbon Glycosidic bond, hemiacetal, acetal Mutarotation Reducing sugar
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Trioses (three carbons)
* Know * * aldose aldose ketose
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* Adlose family Aldose family * Know * * * *
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* Ketose family Ketose family * Know * *
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D-Stereochemistry of Glucose
Convention for the Fischer projection: Carbonyl (#1C) is at the top. OH to right = "D" OH to left = "L" Glucose is assigned the D stereochemistry because the penultimate carbon atom is D.
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Hemiacetal formation
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Pyranose and Furanose forms
Hemiacetal, Haworth structure Hemiketal, Haworth structure
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Haworth Structure of Glucose
Draw Fischer, rotate 90o, then form the hemiacetal a-anomer b-anomer
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Haworth Structure of Fructose
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Ribose and Deoxyribse Haworth structures
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Mutarotation of Fructose
Open chain form
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Mutarotation of Glucose
b-D-glucofuranose ~0.5% a-D-glucofuranose ~0.5% Open chain Form ~0.003% a-D-glucopyranose 36%, aD = 112o b-D-glucopyranose 63%, aD = 18.7o Observed rotation = 52.7o
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Glycosidic bond (acetal)
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Three glucose residues
The connections (gycosidic bonds) are (a 1-4)
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Lobry de Bruyn-Alberda von Eckenstein rearrangement
Reaction of a sugar in NaOH.
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Methylation of Glucose
Converting a hemiacetal to an acetal.
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Methylation of Glucose
Exhaustive methylation forms one glycocidic bond and the rest are ethers.
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Sugar Derivatives Also, oxidized or reduced or phosphorylated or amino sugars
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Sugar Oxidation at C-1 Gluconic acid
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Sugar Oxidation at C-6
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Sugar Phosphates
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N-Acetylmuramic acid N-acetylglucosamine + lactate,
A component of bacterial cell wall.
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N-Acetylneuraminic acid
N-acetylmannosamine + PEP
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Common disaccharides The anomeric OH in 1, 2, & 3 may be a or b, but sucrose may not. Maltose: a-D-glucopyranosyl-(14)-a-D-glucopyranose 2. Cellibiose: b-D-glucopyranosyl-(14)-a-D-glucopyranose Lactose: b-D-galactopyranosyl-(14)-a-D-glucopyranose 4. Sucrose: a-D-glucopyranosyl-(12)-b-D-fructofuranoside
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Maltose, a disaccharide
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Other disaccharides Cellibiose
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Common Homopolysaccharides
Amylose (linear starch) An a-(14)-D-glucose polymer 2. Cellulose (linear) A b-(14)-D-glucose polymer Amylopectin (branched starch) An a-(14)-D-glucose polymer branched a-(16) Glycogen (branched) Chitin (linear) An b-(14)-D-N-acetylglucosamine polymer
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Glucopolysaccharides
Homopolysaccharides
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A 1-6 branch point This branch occurs in glycogen and amylopectin.
However, glycogen is more highly branched.
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A high energy glucose carrier
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Heteropolysaccharides
Glycosaminoglycans (disaccharide repeating units) Chondroitin-6-sulfate: -D-glucuronic acid-(b 13)-N-acetyl-D-galactosamine-6-sulfate-(b 14)- Keratan sulfate: -D-galactose-(b 14)-N-acetyl-D-glucosamine-6-sulfate-(b 13)-
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Heteropolysaccharides
Glycosaminoglycans (disaccharide repeating units) Dermatan sulfate: -L-iduronic acid-(b 13)-N-acetyl-D-galactosamine-4-sulfate-(b 14)- Hyaluronic acid: -D-glucuronic acid-(b 13)-N-acetyl-D-glucosamine-(b 14)-
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A Proteoglycan A glycoconjugate:
(polysaccharide linked to a protein or peptide)
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Proteogycan Electron micrograph
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Complex Carbohydrates
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L-Fucose L-fucose is 6-deoxy-L-galactose
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Linkages in Glycoproteins
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N-Linked Carbohydrate
High mannose
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N-Linked Carbohydrate
Complex carbohydrate
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Dolichol phosphate (isoprenoid)
This is the endoplasmic reticulum membrane anchor on which the core carbohydrate for a glycoprotein is synthesized. It is then modified in a Golgi body.
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From Golgi to Lysosome Mannose-6-P is a marker that directs some hydrolytic proteins from a Golgi body to a lysosome where glycolipids and glycosaminoglycans are degraded.
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Hydrolysis of the N-acetylglucosamine to leave a Mannose-6-P residue.
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Review - Glycoconjugates
Proteoglycans (glycosaminoglycans + protein). Mostly carbohydrate (~85%), e.g. cartilage Glycoproteins (most 1-10% carbohydrate) N and O linked complex carbohydrates e.g. receptors Peptidoglycans (carbohydrate + small peptide). e.g. bacterial cell wall
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Proteoglycan Sketch
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Peptidoglycan Bacterial cell wall (murein): A long linear polymer of:
-N-acetyl-D-glucosamine-(b 14) -N-acetyl- Muramic acid-(b 14)- A tetrapeptide is attached through the carboxyl of the lactate moiety of muramic acid. Lactate-CO-L-Ala-D-isoGlu-L-Lys-D-Ala-
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Peptidoglycan Bacterial cell wall:
Lactate-CO-L-Ala-D-isoGlu-L-Lys-D-Ala- In gram (+) bacteria crosslinks are formed by a pentaglycine bridge from the D-Ala residue above to the L-Lys in another peptide. (Outer surface is carbohydrate) In gram (-) bacteria crosslinks are formed by a direct link from the D-Ala residue above to the L-Lys in another peptide. (Outer surface is cell membrane)
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Gram Positive (+) Cell Wall
Up to 20 layers of peptideglycan
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Gram Negative (-) Cell Wall
Monolayer of peptideglycan
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Biochemistry Sixth Edition
Berg • Tymoczko • Stryer End of Chapter 11 Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company
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