Carbohydrates Flashcards
Properties of monosaccharides (Physical & Chemical) + reasons
Physical:
Soluble in water due to its small size and presence of numerous polar (-OH) groups that can form hydrogen bonds with water.
Chemical:
Are reducing sugars due to the presence of a (C=O) group that can donate electrons to reduce Cu2+ to Cu+ in Benedict’s test.
What is a glycosidic covalent bond? How is it formed?
It is a covalent bond that links 2 monosaccharides in a disaccharide.
Formed via a condensation reaction between 2 monosaccharides, involving the loss of 1 water molecule.
How is a glycosidic bond broken?
Hydrolysis- Breaking the glycosidic covalent bond with the addition of 1 water molecule.
2 ways:
Enzymatic
Acid Hydrolysis: Sugar is incubated with an acid at high temperature to facilitate the cleavage of the bond.
Properties of disaccharides (Physical + Chemical)
Physical:
Same as monosaccharides
Chemical:
Able to undergo hydrolysis to form 2 monosaccharides
Are reducing sugars except sucrose
Types of polysaccharides? + Examples
Energy storage
Starch / Glycogen
Structural
Cellulose
What is the function of starch?
It serves as an energy storage molecule in plants. It is stored as starch granules within cellular structures such as chloroplasts.
What is the structure and properties of starch?
Structure:
Polymer of α-glucose monomers, and consists of 2 types of polymers: Amylose and amylopectin.
Properties:
Insoluble in water due to its large size.
Details about amylose (3 points)
It consists of α-glucose monomers joined by α-1,4 glycosidic bonds.
This gives rise to a compact helix: Many glucose molecules can be stored in the limited space of the plant cell.
(-OH) Groups on carbon 2 of each chain projects into the helix > Forms hydrogen bonds with each other > Stabilizes the helical shape.
Details about amylopectin (2 points)
It consists of α-glucose monomers joined by α-1,4 glycosidic bonds and α-1,6 glycosidic bonds at branch points.
Branching provides many ends which are accessible to hydrolytic enzymes, allowing for the quick* hydrolysis of amylopectin to release many glucose molecules.
Details about glycogen
It consists of α-glucose monomers joined by:
α-1,4 glycosidic bonds
Gives rise to helical structure of glycogen > compact > Able to store more glucose molecules within the limited space of the storage cell
α-1,6 glycosidic bonds at branch points
Branching provides many ends which are accessible to hydrolytic enzymes, allowing for the quick* hydrolysis of glycogen to release many glucose molecules.