Complex carbohydrates Flashcards
1
Q
What are the sources of complex carbohydrates (2)
A
- plant sources
- animal meat
2
Q
What are the complex carbohydrates ‘polymers’ of sugars (2)
A
- homoglycans/homopolysaccharides - simpler structures - one type of sugar units
- heteroglycans/heteropolysaccharides - more complex - various sugar units and glycose derivatives repeating units present.
3
Q
What are the functions of complex carbohydrates (5)
A
- Storage - starch, glycogen
- structural - cellulose, chitin
- protective - hyaluronic acid (connective tissue)
- cellular recognition - blood group systems
- specific agents - heparin (anti-coagulant)
4
Q
Complex carbohydrates structure and name (3)
A
- Alpha glucose - Axial OH (downwards)
- Beta glucose - Equatorial OH (upwards)
- Name alpha/beta then numerically from the axial/equatorial OH depending on the carbon the bond is on
5
Q
What is the structure of amylose (3)
A
- linear chains of glucose of varying chain length
- glycosidic linkages are a (1→4)
- These linkages promote a helix structure in which hydrogen bonds form between the oxygen bound at the 2 carbon of one glucose and the carbon 3 of the next glucose.
6
Q
How are complex carbs metabolised (2)
A
- disaccharides → monosaccharides
- via glycoside hydrolases
7
Q
How is amylase metabolised (2)
A
- salivary alpha-amylase in animals (endoamylase) splits alpha(1→4) glucosidic linkages
- beta-amylase in plants and microorganisms (exoamylase) cleaves disaccharide units from the non-reducing end of chains to form dimers of maltose units
8
Q
What is cellulose (5)
A
- found in cell walls of plants
- linear polymer of glucose beta (1→4) linkages
- hydrogen bonding provides strength
- chemically inert, resistant to hydrolysis by digestive tract amylases in humans
- requires cellulase - a bacterial beta-glucoside which enables digestion by ruminants e.g. cows
9
Q
What is Microcrystalline cellulose (5)
A
- found in cell walls of plants
- microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) is a term for refined wood pulp
- texturiser, and an anti-caking agent
- fat substitute, emulsifier, filler and diluent
- extender, bulking agent in food production
10
Q
What is glycogen (6)
A
- major form of energy source in animals
- found in the liver and muscles
- highly branched glucose chains
- branches every 8-12 glucose units
- liner linkages - alpha(1→4)
- branch linkages - alpha(1→6)
11
Q
How is glycogen metabolised (4)
A
- in muscles & liver
- Hydrolysed by Glycogen phosphorylase to release glucose-1-phosphate.
- Insulin (a hormone) stimulates conversion of glucose to glycogen
- Glucagon (a hormone) stimulates conversion of glycogen to glucose
12
Q
What are heteroglycans (4)
A
- Heteroglycans in nature contain other sugars with an anomeric centre
- alpha-glucose (pytanose form)
- alpha-galactose (pyronose form)
- alpha-mannose (pyranose form)
13
Q
What are acylated aminoglycan molecules (3)
A
- Important acylated aminoglycan molecules are with an anomeric centre: (often found in glycoproteins)
- N-acetylglucosamine
- N-acetylgalactosamine
14
Q
What is chitin
A