Unit 2 - Carbohydrates Flashcards
Specification reference 2.1.2
A single sugar unit is known as a…
Monosaccharide (a monomer of sugar)
What is the chemical composition of a carbohydrate?
Carbon, oxygen, & hydrogen
When two or more monosaccharides are linked they form…
A polymer called a polysaccharide.
Glucose is a monosacharride composed of six carbons and is therefore a…
Hexose monosaccaride
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Name the two structural variation of the glucose molecule
- Alpha (α) glucose
- Beta (β) glucose
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How does alpha glucose differ from beta glucose?
The hydroxyl group (OH) on carbon 1 is in opposite positions
This affects the structure and properties of the polysaccarides when it bonds
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How is a disaccharide formed?
- A condensation reaction
- 2 monosaccharides join together in a condensation reaction.
- The two hydroxyl groups interact - bonds are broken in the OH group and a new glycosidic bond is formed
- Water is released
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Name this dissacharide…
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Glucose + galactose = Lactose
Name this dissacharide…
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Glucose + glucose = Maltose
Name this dissacharide…
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Glucose + fructose = Sucrose
What is a pentose sugar?
Sugars that contain five carbon atoms
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Which two pentose sugars are important components of biological molecules?
Ribose (sugar found in RNA) and Dexoyribose (sugar found in DNA)
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What are the properties of starch?
- Compact
- Chemical energy store
- Easily digestible
- Made of amylose (mainly, 1-4 glycosidic bonds) and amylopectin (1-4 and some 1-6 glycosidic bonds)
- Insoluble does not create a water potential gradient (doesn’t cause water to enter cells by osmosis which would make them swell up)
Describe the properties and structure of amylose.
- Long chains of alpha glucose (unbranched)
- Joined by 1-4 glycosidic bonds
- Insoluble (does not create water potential gradient)
- Metabolically inactive
- Long chain of glucose that twists into a helix (compact for storage)
- Helix held together by hydrogen bonds
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Describe the properties and structure of amylopectin.
- Long, branched chains of alpha glucose
- Joined by 1-4 glycosidic bonds (chains) and 1-6 glycosidic bonds (branches)
- 1-6 branching points occur approximately one in every 25 glucose subunits.
- Compact and idealy for storage
- Insoluable (do not affect water potential)
- Branches gives ‘free ends’ so glucose can be added or released quickly
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Describe the properties and structure of glycogen
- Short, branched chains of alpha glucose
- Joined by 1-4 glycosidic bonds (chains) and 1-6 glycosidic bonds (branches)
- Compact and insoluble so good for storage
- Branching means many ‘free ends so glucose can be released (or stored) quickly
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What is the function of glycogen?
- Main energy store in animals
- Stores soluble glucose that affects water potential as insoluble polysaccharide until needed
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Describe the structure and properties of cellulose.
- Long, unbranched chain of beta (β) glucose
- Contains 1-4 glcyosidic bonds
- Beta (β) glucose molecules bond forming straight cellulose chains
- Every other glucose molecule is orientated at 180 degrees - e.g alternate beta (β) glucose are turned upside down.
- Chains are linked by hydrogen bonds forming strong fibres called microfibrils (compact)
- Microfibrils join to make macrofibrils, which combine to make fibres
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Describe the function of cellulose?
- Cellulose is an important part of our diet as it is very hard to breakdown so if the fibre necessary for a healthy digestive system
- Cellulose provides structural support for cells
How is a disaccharide broken down?
- Hydolysis reaction
- Addition of water to hydrolyse the disaccharide into (useable) monomers
- Reactions are catalysed by enzymes
- These are the opposite of condensation reactions that form glycosidic bonds.
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