4.3 Monosaccharides Flashcards
1
Q
Monosaccharides
A
- contain alcohols and either aldehydes or ketones
- these functional groups undergo the same reactions that they do when present in other compounds
- Including: oxidation and reduction, esterification, and nucleophilic attack (creating glycosides)
2
Q
What type of rxn is required to make carbohydrates into energy?
A
- Oxidation, of the carbs.
3
Q
Aldonic acids
A
- oxidized aldoses
- reducing agents
4
Q
Reducing Sugar
A
- any monosaccharide with a hemiacetal ring
5
Q
Lactone
A
- When an aldose in ring form is oxidized, creates a cyclic ester with a carbonyl group persisting on the anomeric carbon
6
Q
What reagents are used to detect the presence of reducing sugars?
A
Tollens’ reagent and Benedict’s reagent
7
Q
Tollens’ reagent
A
- Silver oxide is dissolved in ammonia to produce [Ag(NH3)2]+, the actual Tollens’ reagent
8
Q
Benedict’s reagent
A
- the aldehyde group of an aldose is readily oxidized,
indicated by a red precipitate of Cu2O,
9
Q
Tautomerization
A
the rearrangement of bonds in a compound, usually by moving a hydrogen and forming a double bond
10
Q
Enol
A
- a compound with a double bond and an alcohol group
11
Q
Alditol
A
- When the aldehyde group of an aldose is reduced to an alcohol
12
Q
Deoxy sugar
A
- contains a hydrogen that replaces a hydroxyl group on the sugar
13
Q
What rxn do hydroxyl groups on carbs participate in?
A
- *Esterification
- they are able to participate in
reactions with carboxylic acids and carboxylic acid derivatives to form esters - very similar to the phosphorylation of glucose, in which a phosphate ester is formed
14
Q
How do Glycosides form?
A
- Hemiacetals form acetals with alcohol. Then Anomeric hydroxyl group transforms into alkoxy and glycosidic bonds along with glycosides.
- glycoside formation is a dehydration reaction
- Glycosides derived from furanose rings are referred to as furanosides and those derived from pyranose rings are called pyranosides
15
Q
How do Disaccharides and polysaccharides form?
A
-as a result of glycosidic bonds
between monosaccharides