Carbohydrates Flashcards

1
Q

What are the properties of monosaccharides

A

Very water soluble, sweet, have a carbonyl group which us an aldehyde or a ketone and has at least 2 carbons with a hydroxyl group

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2
Q

What are epimers

A

When a pair of sugars are identical except for the chirality at one carbon atom
Are special cases of diastestromers

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3
Q

Any aldehyde + an alcohol =

A

Hemiacetal

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4
Q

Alchohol + ketone =

A

Hemiketal

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5
Q

What is mutarotation

A

The change in the optical rotation because of the change in the equilibrium between two anomers
Solid glucose is found in the a or b for of the hemiacetal

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6
Q

What are the two types of rings sugars can form when crystallized

A

Pyranose: a 6 membered ring called a pyran. Hexose sugar eg. Glucose
Furanose: 5 membered ring called a furan. Pentise sugar eg. Ribose

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7
Q

What are reducing sugars

A

Reducing sugars are oxidized by the cu 2+ ions , becomes cu+. The cu then precipitates out of solution as a eust colored Cu2O

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8
Q

Which carbon of the sugar is most reactive and why

A

The anomeric carbon. Is bonded to two oxygen atoms, this makes it very electrophilic and reactive

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9
Q

What differentiates a reducing sugar and a non reducing sugar (in terms of structure)

A

If two sugars are linked head to tail, they can still form a free aldehyde group at its head group. Eg lactose. If two sugars are connected head to head, not a reducing sugar. Eg. Sucrose

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10
Q

What are glycosides

A

Most important reaction for a sugar, is a condensation reaction

Glycosidic bond: C-O -> alcohol
Glycosilic bond: C-N -> amine

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11
Q

What is a disaccharide

A

Built from 2 simple sugars

Eg. Sucrose

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12
Q

What are polysaccharides and what are the two types

A

Are highly branched because sugars have several OH groups and each act as a nucleophile to form a glycosidic bond

Homopolysaccharides: made from a single type of sugar eg: starch, glucagon, cellulose, chitin
Heteropolysaccharides: sugars built from two or more kinds of sugars

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13
Q

What are the three types of sugars

A

Monosaccharides: simple with only one sugar unit
Disaccharides: two or more sugars
Polysaccharides: polymers of 20 or more sugar units
Oligosaccharides: short chain of saccharide units

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14
Q

Why is the aldehyde carbon always found in position C1 in aldose sugars

A

The aldehyde carbon must be at the end of the chain since its double bonded to an oxygen and one hydrogen. The only other bond that is possible is to the rest of the carbons in the chain

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15
Q

What is the property of glucose that changes the specific rotation when dissolved in water and what is a specific rotation

A

Mutarotation is when a sample of the alpha or beta anomer of glucose is dissolved in water.

Specific rotation is the angle through which the plane of polarization changes when a plane of polarized light is passed through a sample

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16
Q

Why do two solutions undergoing mutarotation reach the same specific rotation over time

A

Each solutions slowly reach an equilibrium of alpha and beta forms so over time they reach the same amounts