Carbohydrates Flashcards
List the basic properties and functions of carbohydrates.
Monosaccharides: (CH2O)n n=carbon atoms. n=3 triose, n=5 pentose. ribose sugars are pentoses present in RNA, carbohydrates also play a major role in energy storage in plants and animals.
Describe the key structural features of monosaccharides (aldose, ketose, L and D isomeric forms and cyclisation).
Aldose sugars have an aldehyde C1=0, ketose sugars have a ketone C=O in the middle of the carbon chain
D sugars: -OH group on the asymmetric carbon farthest from the carbonyl carbon (C1) is on the right
L sugars: -OH group on asymmetric carbon farthest from C1 on the left
(majority are D sugars
Cyclisation: sugars twist and rotate about their bonds, rapidly reversing, aldehyde or ketone group reacts with alcohol group on same sugar resulting in cyclisation
Describe glycosidic bonds between common disaccharides.
Lactose (B-galactose + glucose) bond between C1 of b-galactose and C4 of glucose -> B(1-4) glycosidic bond.
alpha: -OH down
beta: -OH up
Describe the structure and function of polysaccharides.
Energy storage in
- Animals: glycogen: glucose homopolymer with alpha 1-4 and 1-6 linkages, branched every 12-14 residues
- Plants: starch: glucose homopolymer composed of amylopectin (branched) and amylose (not branched)
- Cellulose: homopolymer of glucose B1-4 unbranched
Describe constituents of the extracellular matrix including glycosaminoglycans and proteoglycans.
GAGs, fibrous, and adhesive proteins, act as flexible support for ECM, proteoglycans are complexes of GAG chains with protein cores and protein links attached to hyaluronic acid backbone
Describe mucopolysaccharidoses.
Autosomal recessive, GAG accumulation in lysosomes due lysosomal hydrolase deficiency, leading to skeletal deformities and intellectual disabilities
Define glycoproteins and explain their function.
Proteins with attached oligosaccharides, sort proteins into various compartments, act as enzymes, hormones, antibodies, structural proteins, and cell surface recognition (eg blood groups)
Define glycoproteins and explain their function.
Proteins with attached oligosaccharides, sort proteins into various compartments, act as enzymes, hormones, antibodies, structural proteins, and cell surface recognition (eg blood groups)
Discuss glycoprotein storage diseases.
Clinically progressive hereditary disorder, mainly autosomal recessive, deficiency of lysosomal hydrolases, accumulation of partially degraded structures in lysosome. urine test for oligosacch’s to diagnose