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www.soran.edu.iq Organic and biochemistry Assistance Lecturer Amjad Ahmed Jumaa Carbohydrates; mono saccharides. Osazone formation. Disaccharides; poly saccharides. amino acids and proteins Properties of amino acids. 1
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www.soran.edu.iq Carbohydrates: The Latin word for sugar is (saccharum). (+)-Glucose, cellulose, starch, and glycogen all belong to the class of organic compounds known as carbohydrates. Carbohydrates are polyhydroxy aldehydes, polyhydroxy ketones. A carbohydrate that cannot be hydrolyzed to simpler compounds is called a monosaccharide. A carbohydrate that can be hydrolyzed to two monosaccharide molecules is called disaccharide. And this in which can be hydrolyzed to many monosaccharide molecules is called a polysaccharide. Monosaccharide: Monosaccharide is also classified into:
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www.soran.edu.iq 1-aldose, if it contain aldehyde group. 2-ketose, if it contains a keto group. A monosaccharide is known as a triose, tetrose, pentose, and hexose. For example:
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www.soran.edu.iq A) An aldohexose: is a six-carbon monosaccharide containing an aldehyde group. For example, (+)-Glucose, has the molecular formula (C 6 H 12 O 6 ). A six-carbon, straight-chain, pentahydroxy aldehyde that is (+)-glucose is an aldohexose.
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www.soran.edu.iq B) A ketopentose: is a five-carbon monosaccharide containing a keto group. For example, L-Xylulose has the molecular formula (C 5 H 10 O 5 ). A five-carbon, straight-chain, butahydroxy keto, and thus L-Xylulose is a ketopentose.
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www.soran.edu.iq Osazone formation: As aldehydes, aldoses react with phenyl hydrazine to form phenyl hydrazones. By uses excesses of phenyl hydrazine the products known as osazones. Osazones contain two phenyl hydrazine residues per molecule. Disaccharides: Disaccharides are carbohydrate that are made up of two monosaccharide units, on hydrolysis a molecule of disaccharides yields two molecules of monosaccharide.
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www.soran.edu.iq 1-(+)-Maltose: 1-Can be obtained by partial hydrolysis of starch in aqueous acid. 2-has molecular formula (C 12 H 22 O 11 ). 3-it reduces Tollens' and Fehling's reagents and hence is a reducing sugar. 4-It reacts with phenyl hydrazine to yield an osazone (C 12 H 20 O 9; = NNHC 6 H 5 ) 2. 5-It is oxidized by bromine water to a monocarboxylic acid, (C 11 H 21 O 10 ) COOH, maltobionic acid.
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www.soran.edu.iq 2-(+)-Sucrose: 1-Is our common table sugar, obtained from sugar cane and sugar beets. 2-It has the molecular formula (C 12 H 22 O 11 ). 3-it does not reduce Tollens' or Fehling's reagent. It is a non reducing sugar, and in this respect it differs from other disaccharides. 4-(+)-Sucrose dose not form an osazone.
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www.soran.edu.iq Polysaccharides: 1-made up of many-hundreds or even thousands-monosaccharide units per molecule. 2-Polysaccharides are naturally occurring polymers, which can be considered as derived from aldoses or ketoses by condition polymerization. 3-A polysaccharides derived from hexoses, for example, has the general formula (C 6 H 10 O 5 ) n. 4- In general starch contains 20% of a water-soluble fraction called amylose, and 80% of a water-insoluble fraction called amylopection.
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www.soran.edu.iq Amino acid and proteins: 1-proteins are taken from the Greek"proteios", which means first. 2-They are the substance of life. 3-They make up a large part of the animal body, they hold it together, and they are run it. 4-They are found in all living cell, they are principle material of skin, muscle, tendons, nerves, and blood; of enzymes, antibodies, and many hormones. 5-Chemically proteins are high polymers. amino acids they are carboxylic acids that contain an amine function.
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www.soran.edu.iq An amide bond between the carboxylic acid function of one amino acid and the amino nitrogen of another is called a peptide bond. Look at the following. A dipeptide is a molecule consisting of two amino acids joined by a peptide bond.
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www.soran.edu.iq Properties of the amino acids: Some amino acids in addition to the carboxyl group and the amino group alpha to it, they contain a second carboxyl group, example, (aspartic acid or glutamic acid.).And other may contain a second basic group, example, (lysine). Also we see amino acids as dipolar ions, let us take some physical and chemical properties: 1) The amino acids are non-volatile crystalline solids. 2) They are insoluble in non-polar solvent like petroleum ether. 3) Their aqueous solutions behave like solutions of substance of high dipole moment.
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