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Case Western Reserve University
Chapter 22 Carbohydrates Organic Chemistry 4th Edition Paula Yurkanis Bruice Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall
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Carbohydrates They have the molecular formulas Cn(H2O)n
Compounds that can be hydrolyzed to polyhydroxy aldehydes or polyhydroxy ketones are also classified as carbohydrates
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Simple Carbohydrates Are Monosacharides
Complex carbohydrates contain two or more sugar units linked together disaccharides oligosaccharides polysaccharides Polyhydroxy aldehydes are aldoses Polyhydroxy ketones are ketoses
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D and L notations are used to describe the configurations
of carbohydrates
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Configurations of Aldoses
Aldotetroses have two asymmetric carbons and four stereoisomers
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Diastereomers that differ in configuration at only one
asymmetric carbon are called epimers
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A ketose has one less asysmmetric carbon than aldoses, therefore they have fewer stereoisomers
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Redox Reactions of Monosaccharides
The carbonyl of aldoses and ketoses can be reduced by the carbonyl-group reducing agents
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Oxidation The aldehyde groups can be oxidized by Br2
Ketones and alcohols cannot be oxidized by Br2
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In a basic solution, ketoses are converted into aldoses
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A strong oxidizing agent such as HNO3 can oxidize the
aldehyde and the alcohol groups
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Osazone Formation Aldoses and ketoses react with three equivalents of
phenylhydrazine
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The C-2 epimers of aldoses form identical osazones
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Reaction of Ketoses with Phenylhydrazine
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The carbon chain of an aldose can be increased by one
carbon in a Kiliani–Fischer synthesis
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The Ruff degradation shortens an aldose chain by one
carbon
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Preparation of the Calcium D-Gluconate for the Ruff Degradation
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Cyclic Structure of Monosaccharides
Hemiacetal Formation anomer anomer The specific rotation of pure a-D-glucose or b-D-glucose changes over time to reach an equilibrium (mutarotation)
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Note … If an aldose can form a five- or six-membered ring, it will exist predominantly as a cyclic hemiacetal Six-membered rings are called pyranoses Five-membered rings are called furanoses A sugar with an aldehyde, a ketone, a hemiacetal, or a hemiacetal group is a reducing sugar
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The structures of cyclic sugars are best represented by
the Haworth projections Haworth projections allow us to see the relative orientation of the OH groups in the ring
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Ketoses also exist predominantly in cyclic forms
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b-D-Glucose Is More Stable
b-D-glucose is the predominant form at equilibrium
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Acylation of Monosaccharides
The OH groups of monosaccharides show the chemistry of typical alcohols
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Alkylation of the OH Groups
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Formation of Glycosides
The acetal (or ketal) of a sugar is called a glycoside
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Mechanism of Glycoside Formation
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Formation of an N-Glycoside
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The Anomeric Effect The formation of a glycoside favors the a-glucoside product: the anomeric effect
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Determination of Ring Size
Approach 1 The size of the ring can be determined from the structure of the open-chain form
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Determination of Ring Size
Approach 2 An acetal of the monosaccharide is oxidized with excess HIO4 The a-hydroxyaldehyde formed from HIO4 oxidation is further oxidized to formic acid and another aldehyde
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Disaccharides Composed of two monosaccharide subunits hooked
together by an acetal linkage In a-maltose, the OH group bonded to the anomeric carbon is axial Maltose is a reducing sugar
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In cellobiose, the two subunits are hooked together by a
b-1,4’-glycosidic linkage Cellobiose is a reducing sugar
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In lactose, the two different subunits are joined by a
b-1,4’-glycosidic linkage Lactose is a reducing sugar
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The most common disaccharide is sucrose
Sucrose is not a reducing sugar
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Polysaccharides Amylose is a component of starch
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Amylopectin is another polysaccharide component of
starch that has a branched structure
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An example of a naturally occurring product derived from
carbohydrates
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Blood type is determined by the nature of the sugar
bound to the protein on the surface of red blood cells
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