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Introduction to Carbohydrates

one of the three major classes of biological molecules.
most abundant biological molecules.

carbohydrates

Functions of Carbohydrates

1) Energy
2. Provides dietary Fiber

3. Structural

4. Intercellular Communication

-glucose fuels the work of most of the body’s cells
-preferred fuel of NERVOUS TISSUE (the brain, nerves) and RED BLOOD CELLS (RBC)

-excess glucose is stored as GLYCOGEN in liver and muscle tissue

energy

-Found in plants
-increase fecal weight and soften stool to ease passage

-reduces risk of hemorrhoids, diverticulitis, appendicitis and colon cancer

-beneficial for weight control by contributing to satiety & delay gastric emptying

-soluble fibers lower blood cholesterol to help reduce risk of cardiovascular disease

Provides dietary Fiber

(components of nucleotides, plant and bacterial cell walls, arthropod exoskeletons, animal connective tissue etc.)

Structural

(component of the cell surface/membrane-- molecular recognition)

Intercellular Communication

Carbohydrates Contain the Elements:

-Carbon
-Hydrogen

-Oxygen

The formula for a carbohydrate is:

(CH2O)n

The __ represents the number of times the CH2O unit is repeated.

n

All carbohydrates can be classified as:

1. Monosaccharides
2. Disaccharides

3. Oligosaccharide

4. Polysaccharides

-one unit of carbohydrate

Monosaccharides

-carbohydrate form used by the body; referred to as “blood sugar”
-basic sub-unit of other larger carbohydrate molecules

-found in fruits, vegetables, honey

glucose

-sweetest of the sugars
-occurs naturally in fruits & honey, “fruit sugar”

Fructose

It combines with glucose to form lactose, “milk sugar”

Galactose

Two units of carbohydrates joined by glycosidic bond.

Disaccharides

fructose + glucose (also known as “table sugar” ) =

Sucrose

galactose + glucose (also known as “milk sugar”) =

Lactose

glucose + glucose (also known as “malt sugar”, maltose is in beer) =

Maltose

Anywhere from three to ten monosaccharide units joined by glycosidic bonds. found in legumes and human milk

Oligosaccharide

are much larger, containing hundreds of monosaccharide units joined by glycosidic bonds.

Polysaccharides

-plant storage form of carbohydrate
-long branched or unbranched chains of glucose

starch

-animal storage form of carbohydrate
-highly branched chains of glucose units

-found in LIVER and MUSCLE

-Humans store ~ 100g in liver; ~ 400g in muscle

glycogen

-consisting of a linear chain of several hundred to many thousands of β(1→4) linked glucose units commonly found in plant’s cell wall.
-This β-1,4 bonds cannot be broken by human enzymes; hence it is a non-digestible carbohydrates found in all types of plant foods

-Often referred to as “Dietary fiber”

cellulose

Carbohydrates also can combine with lipids to form _________
With proteins to form ___________.

glycolipids
glycoproteins

carbohydrates joined by __________.

glycosidic bond

Monosaccharides examples:

-glucose
-fructose

-galactose

Disaccharides examples:

-sucrose
-lactose

-maltose

Oligosaccharide examples:

-raffinose
-stachyose

Polysaccharides examples:

-starch
-glycogen

-cellulose

Carbohydrates are chemically characterized as:

-aldose
-ketose

-Sugars that contain an aldehyde group.
-Examples of aldoses are Glucose, Galactose, and Mannose. They are also known as aldohexose.

aldose

-Sugars that contain a keto group.
-Examples of ketos is fructose. It is also known as ketohexose.

ketose

Aldose
-Sugars that contain an aldehyde group.

-Examples of aldoses are Glucose, Galactose, and Mannose. They are also known as _________.

aldohexose

Ketose
-Sugars that contain a keto group.

-Examples of ketos is fructose. It is also known as _______.

ketohexose

Examples of aldoses are:

Glucose, Galactose, and Mannose

Examples of ketos is:

fructose

are molecules that have the same molecular formula, but have a different arrangement of the atoms in space.

isomers

Examples of isomers:

-Glucose
-Fructose

-Galactose

-Mannose

epimers

are sugars that differ in configuration at ONLY 1 POSITION.
(of course, they are also isomers)

Examples of epimers :

D-glucose & D-galactose (epimeric at C4)
D-glucose & D-mannose (epimeric at C2)

TRIOSE
number of carbons:

formula:

-3
-C3H6O3

TETROSE
number of carbon:

formula:

-4
-C4H8O4

PENTOSE
number of carbon:

formula:

-5
-C5H10O5

HEXOSE
number of carbon:

formula:

-6
-C6H12O6

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