4.2 Cyclic Sugar Molecules Flashcards
1
Q
What do Monosaccharides contain?
A
- both a hydroxyl group, which can serve as a nucleophile, and a carbonyl group which is the most common electrophile
2
Q
What can result from intramolecular rxns in monosaccharides?
A
- cyclic hemiacetals (from aldoses) and hemiketals (from ketoses)
- Regardless of whether hemiacetal or hemiketal is formed, the carbonyl carbon becomes chiral in this process, and is referred to as the anomeric carbon (which was the carbonyl carbon)
3
Q
Which cyclic molecules are stable in solution?
A
- sixmembered pyranose rings or five-membered furanose rings
4
Q
Anomers
A
- two molecules differ at the
anomeric carbon - cyclization of a sugar molecule: α or β are anomers
5
Q
When we convert the monosaccharide from its straight-chain Fischer projection to the Haworth projection which groups are up and which are down?
A
any group on the right in the
Fischer projection will point down
6
Q
What happens when hemiacetal rings are exposed to water?
A
- will cause them to spontaneously cycle between the open and closed form
7
Q
Mutarotation
A
- The spontaneous change of
configuration about C-1 - occurs more rapidly when the reaction is catalyzed with an acid or base
- results in a mixture that contains both α- and β anomers at equilibrium concentrations (for glucose: 36% α, 64% β)
8
Q
Which configuration is favorable α- or β?
A
the α-anomeric configuration is less favored because the hydroxyl group of the anomeric
carbon is axial, adding to the steric strain of the molecule.