4.1 Carbohydrate Classification [HY] Flashcards
What is the most direct source of chemical energy for almost all organisms?
Carbohydrates
Monosaccharides
- the most basic structural units of carbohydrates
Trioses
- The simplest monosaccharides, contain three carbon atoms
- Carbohydrates with four, five, and six carbon atoms are called tetroses, pentoses, and hexoses
Aldoses
Carbohydrates that contain an aldehyde group as their most oxidized functional group
Ketoses
those with a ketone group as their most oxidized functional group
Numbering carbon atoms in monosaccharide
- The carbonyl carbon is the most oxidized, and therefore
will always have the lowest possible number - In an aldose, the aldehyde
carbon will always be carbon number one (C-1) - The aldehyde carbon can participate in glycosidic linkages; sugars acting as substituents via this linkage are called glycosyl residues.
- the carbonyl carbon is C-2. Ketoses can also
participate in glycosidic bonds at this carbon
Names of important monosaccharides
- D-fructose, D-glucose, D-galatcose, D-mannose
Enantiomers
- A special type of isomerism exists between stereoisomers that are nonidentical, nonsuperimposable mirror images of each other
- d-glucose and L-glucose
Optical isomers (stereoisomers)
compounds that have the
same chemical formula; these molecules differ from one another only in terms of the spatial arrangement of their component atoms
Chiral Carbon
- one that has four different groups attached to it
- any molecule that contains chiral carbons and no internal
planes of symmetry has an enantiomer
How can you determine the # of possible stereoisomers?
- can exist for a multi-carbon compound, identify the number of chiral carbons (n) and plug into the formula 2^n
- As the number of chiral carbons increases, so too does the number of possible stereoisomers because one
compound may have many diastereomers.
How are hydroxides oriented on the highest numbered chiral center for L & D?
all d-sugars have the hydroxide of their highest-numbered chiral center on the right, and all L-sugars have that hydroxide on the left.
Diastereomers
Two sugars that are in the same family (both are either ketoses or aldoses, and have the same number of carbons) that are not identical and are not mirror images of each other
Epimers
A special subtype of diastereomers are those that differ in configuration at exactly one chiral center.
How many enantiomers and diastereomers does a compound have?
a compound can have only one enantiomer (the left hand to its right hand, or vice versa), but may have multiple diastereomers, depending on how many (and which) chiral carbons are inverted between the two molecules.