Unit 10R - Carbohydrates
Unit 10R - Carbohydrates
Unit 10R - Carbohydrates
Pentane
2-Methylbutane
In stereoisomerism, the isomers have the same molecular formula and the same structural
formula but differ in the spatial arrangement of the atoms in the molecule.
Suppose you are asked to construct a molecular model of CHClBrI molecule.
Surprisingly, you can make two distinct molecular models (you will make the models in
lab 11). You will construct the first model by attaching four different atoms (H, Cl, Br,
and I) to the central carbon. The second model will be the mirror image of the first
model. The two models are nonsuperimposable; that is, you can not align all atoms at the
same time.
mirror
C
Br
Cl
H
Cl
Br
H
10-1
These two models are related to each other in a way similar to your right-hand and lefthand.
A right hand is the nonsuperimposable mirror image of a left hand. If you hold your right
hand to a mirror; you see your left hand.
A molecule that is nonsuperimposable on its mirror-image is said to be chiral
(pronounced ki-ral, from Greek word cheir, meaning hand).
The two steroisomers that are nonsuperimposable mirror images of one another are
called a pair of enantiomers (Greek: enantios + meros, oposit + part). If we extend this
concept to our hands, we would consider our right and left hands a pair of enantiomers.
Any organic molecule that contains carbon with four different atoms or groups attached is
a chiral molecule and the carbon is said to be a chiral carbon.
Cl- C - CH 2OH
H
a)
H
CH 3CH2- C - CH3
Br
b)
c)
H - C - C -C
H
OH
OH
d)
Solution
a) Not chiral. Two of the groups attached to the carbon atom are identical.
b) Not chiral. The carbon atom is attached to only three groups.
c) Chiral. The four different groups are H, -CH3, Br, and -CH2CH3.
d) Chiral. The four different groups are H, -COOH, OH, and CH3.
10-2
CH3 - CH-C
3
Glyceraldehyde
Solution
A molecule is chiral if it contains at least one C atom bonded to four different
groups.
Carbon number one has only three different groups attached. The double bond to
oxygen is considered two bonds to oxygen, ie: two bonds to the same atom.
Carbon number two has four groups attached (-H, -OH, -CH3, and CHO). The
four groups are different.
Carbon number three has four groups attached (-H, -H, -H, and CHOHCHO).
The four different groups are NOT different, three are hydrogen.
Of the three carbons, carbon number 2 has four different groups, therefore
glyceraldehyde is chiral.
Br
convert toa
Fischer projection
Chiral carbon
I
H
Br
bonds directed toward you
Cl
Cl
10-3
Notice that in a Fischer projection the chiral carbon is not explicitly shown (not written).
It is represented as the intersection of vertical and horizontal lines.
Fischer projections can also be written for molecules with more than one chiral carbon.
For example, 2-bromo-3-chlorobutane, CH3CHBrCHClCH3 contains two chiral carbons,
the second and the third carbon atoms.
H
Br Cl
H - C - C - C - C - H
H
The Fischer projection can be drawn as:
CH3
H
H
Br
Cl
3
4
CH3
If we examine the two structures above, we notice a distinct difference in the orientation
of the carbon chains. In our study of organic chemistry most carbon chains were written
horizontally. This practice is universally accepted and quite common indeed. When
writing Fischer projections, the carbon chain is always written vertically. The above
Fischer projection represents only one possible stereoisomer of the molecule. A chiral
carbon (by definition) will always have two possible arrangements of the four different
groups attached. The molecule above contains two chiral carbons and therefore four
possible stereoisomers (two for each chiral carbon). The stereoisomers would represent
two pairs of enantiomers. This concept is illustrated in the following worked example.
10-4
CH3
H
H
3
4
Br
Br
Cl
Cl
CH3
H
H
CH3
We now draw the third stereoisomer by switching the sides of the two groups on
one chiral carbon in one of the stereoisomers above. We have arbitrarily chosen
the H and Br on the second carbon in the first molecule (again, for no good
reason). The fourth stereoisomer is drawn as discussed above.
These two molecules represent the second pair of enantiomers
CH3
CH3
Br
H
3
4
CH3
Cl
Cl
Br
H
3
4
CH3
10-5
10.3 Carbohydrates
Carbohydrates, also called saccharides, are the most abundant organic compounds in
nature. Carbohydrates are molecular compounds containing just three elements: carbon,
hydrogen, and oxygen. Glucose (blood sugar), sucrose (table sugar), starch, and cellulose
are a few examples of carbohydrates.
Carbohydrates are classified as monosaccharides, disaccharides, oligosaccharides, and
polysaccharides based on the overall size of the molecular. Most carbohydrates are easily
distinguished from other types of molecules because their names end in ose.
Monosaccharides: can not be broken down into smaller carbohydrate units.
Disaccharides: contain two monosaccharide units.
*Oligosaccharides: contain three to ten monosaccharide units.
Polysaccharides: contain more than ten monosaccharide units.
*Oligosaccharides are less common and of minor importance to us.
10.4 Monosaccharides
Monosaccharides (or simple sugars) are the fundamental building blocks of all
carbohydrates. They can be classified based on functional group, the number of carbon
atoms, or both.
Functional group: A monosaccharide may contain an aldehyde or ketone functional
group. If an aldehyde is present, the monosaccharide is classified as an aldose (note: aldprefix indicates aldehyde, -ose suffix indicates sugar). A monosaccharide with a ketone
group is called a ketose.
Number of carbons: A three-carbon monosaccharide is a triose, a four-carbon
monosaccharide is a tetrose, a five-carbon monosaccharide is a pentose, and a six-carbon
monosaccharide is a hexose.
Functional group and number of carbons: A four-carbon monosaccharide with a
ketone group is called a ketotetrose. A five-carbon monosaccharide with an aldehyde
group is called an aldopentose. Examine the structures below and verify the names.
H O H
H - C - C -C-C-H
OH OH
A ketotetrose
OH
H H H
H - C - C -C-C-C
OH OH OH OH
An aldopentose
10-6
OH
H
OH
OH
CH2OH
a)
b)
c)
d)
Solution
a) There are six carbon atoms, twelve hydrogen atoms and six oxygen atoms.
The molecular formula is C6H12O6.
b) The functional group is an aldehyde, therefore glucose is an aldose.
c) There are six carbon atoms, therefore glucose is a hexose.
d) Combining b and c, glucose is an aldohexose.
10-7
Practice 10-1
The Fischer projection of fructose is given below:
CH2OH
C
HO
O
H
OH
OH
CH2OH
Answer
a) There are six carbon atoms, twelve hydrogen atoms and six oxygen
atoms. The molecular formula is C6H12O6.
b) The functional group is a ketone, therefore fructose is a ketose.
c) There are six carbon atoms, therefore fructose is a hexose.
d) Combining b and c, fructose is a ketohexose.
10-8
Glyceraldehyde:
H - C - C -C
H
OH OH
The two isomers are identified using Fischer projections and differentiated using the
prefixes D- and L-. By convention, the carbon chain is written vertically with the carbonyl
group (most oxidized carbon) at the top. Identify the carbon containing four different
groups (chiral carbon). It is the middle carbon in this case, if the OH group is on the left,
the isomer is assigned L- (remember L for Left), if on the right, it is assigned D-.
is from the Latin levo meaning left and D- is from the Latin dextro meaning right.
The D and L symbols are typically typeset in small caps (D- and L-).
L-
O
C
C
H _______ OH
HO
_______
CH2OH
CH2OH
D-glyceraldehyde
L-glyceraldehyde
If there are two or more chiral carbons in the molecule, the chiral carbon most distant
from the carbonyl group determines the D- or L- isomers. This will always be the second
to the last carbon in the Fischer projection. Therefore, when assigning D- or L- to more
complex isomers, focus only on the second to the last carbon.
carbonylgroup
CHO
H
OH
H
most distant chiral carbon
OH
H
OH
CH2OH
D-Xylose
10-9
Practice 10-2
State whether each of the following is the D or L isomer.
CHO
CH2OH
CH2OH
C
HO
OH
OH
HO
OH
OH
H
H
OH
OH
OH
CH2OH
CH2OH
CH2OH
Ribulose
Sorbose
Idose
(a)
(b)
(c)
Answer
a) D-Ribulose
b) L-Sorbose
c) D-Idose
H
HO
H
H
2
3
4
5
1CHO
OH
HO
OH
HO
OH
6CH 2OH
D-glucose
2
3
4
5
1CH 2OH
OH
HO
OH
6CH 2OH
D-galactose
C=O
3
4
5
H
OH
OH
6CH 2OH
D-fructose
10-10
Note the structures of galactose and glucose are very similar; they differ only in the
orientation of OH at carbon 4. In contrast, fructose is a ketone and differs from glucose
and galactose (aldehydes) at carbons 1 and 2.
Notice that glucose, galactose, and fructose all have the same molecular formula,
C6H12O6. They are isomers.
OH
HO
OH
H
OH
C H
CH2OH
OH
OH
CH2OH
Open Chain
OH
D-Glucose
OH
OH
CH2OH
O
H
OH
4
6
OH
1
D-Glucose
OH
10-11
CH2OH
O
H
H
OH
H
OH
OH
H
OH
H
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
H
OH
H
OH
OH
CH2OH
H
H
Solution
H
H
OH
HO
OH
H
H
D-Mannose
Solution
To identify the #4 carbon atom, we number the carbons starting from the right
side of the ring:
H
6
CH2OH
H
OH
4
OH
3
H
OH
HO
1
2
10-12
C=O
1
HO
H
H
3
4
5
H
OH
OH
HOCH2
5
OH
H
4
OH
CH2OH
OH
HOCH2
5
OH
O
OH
H
4
OH
CH2OH
6CH2OH
-D-fructose
-D-fructose
D-Fructose
Note the carbonyl carbon is carbon #2 in fructose. In the Haworth, the (former) carbonyl
carbon will always be the carbon to the right of the oxygen in the ring.
10-13
Specific example:
CHO
H
COOH
OH
HO
2Cu2+
OH
OH
OH
HO
blue
OH
OH
CH2OH
Cu2O
red
CH2OH
Aldehyde
Carboxylic acid
OH
OH
4 OH
OH
CH2OH
O
1
OH
CH2OH
CH2OH
OH
OH
OH
-D-glucose
-D-glucose
O
1
OH
OH
OH
-1,4-glycosidic bond
4 OH
+ H2O
OH
OH
anomer
Disaccharides are joined through an oxygen bridge. The carbon-oxygen bonds are
called glycosidic bonds.
The most common disaccharides are sucrose, lactose, and maltose.
Sucrose glucose
fructose
Lactose
galactose
glucose
Maltose
glucose
glucose
Sucrose
Sucrose (table sugar) is the most abundant disaccharide in the biological world. Sucrose
contains an -D-glucose unit and a -D-fructose unit joined by a , (1 2) glycosidic
linkage.
Sucrose is a nonreducing sugar because the glycosidic bond involves both anomeric
carbons; therefore there is no free aldehyde group.
10-14
CH2OH
OH
HOCH2
O
1
OH
CH2OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
-D-glucose
OH
CH2OH
1
OH
+ H2O
OH
O
-D-fructose
,1,2-glycosidic bond
HOCH2
O
OH
CH2OH
OH
Lactose
Lactose (milk sugar) is made up of a -D-galactose unit and a D-glucose unit joined by a
(1 4) glycosidic linkage.
Lactose is reducing sugar (glucose ring on the right has a free anomeric carbon that can
open to give an aldehyde).
CH2OH
OH
OH
OH
O
+
OH
4 OH
OH
4 OH
OH
OH
+ H2O
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
-D-galactose
CH2OH
CH2OH
CH2OH
-D-glucose
-D-galactose
Anomer
-1,4-glycosidic bond
Maltose
Maltose (malt sugar) is made up of two D-glucose units. The glycosidic linkage between
4) linkage.
two glucose units is an (1
Maltose is a reducing sugar (glucose ring on the right can open to give an aldehyde).
CH2OH
+
OH
OH
OH
-D-glucose
4 OH
OH
OH
-D-glucose
O
1
OH
OH
CH2OH
O
1
OH
CH2OH
CH2OH
OH
OH
-1,4-glycosidic bond
4 OH
+ H2O
OH
OH
anomer
10-15
10.10 Polysaccharides
A polymer is a very large molecule composed of many small, repeating structural units
that are identical. The repeating structural units are called monomers.
Monomer units
Polymer
Starch
Starch is the primary storage polysaccharide in plants. The most common forms of starch
are amylose and amylopectin. Most starches contain 20 to 25% amylose and 75 to 80%
amylopectin. Complete hydrolysis (breakdown) of both amylose and amylopectin
produces only D-glucose.
Amylose molecules are continuous chains of D-glucose units joined by -1,4-glycosidic
linkage. There are no branch points in the molecule which may contain of as many as
4,000 D-glucose units.
CH2OH
CH2OH
O
O
OH
CH2OH
OH
O
OH
O
O
OH
O
OH
(1
CH2OH
OH
OH
OH
4) linkage
10-16
Glycogen
Glycogen is the major glucose storage molecule in animals. Structurally, glycogen is very
similar to amylopectin (-D-glucose units joined by -1,4-glycosidic linkages), but
glycogen is more highly branched.
10-17
Cellulose
Cellulose is the most abundant organic molecule found in nature. Structurally, cellulose is
a long, unbranched, D-glucose polymer in which the glucose units are linked by (1 4)
glycosidic bonds. In the structure below, note the carbon-1 oxygens are above the ring,
therefore (1 4).
Cellulose in our diet is referred to as fiber and, in contrast to glycogen, amylose, and
amylopectin, it cannot be digested. This is because our digestive system does not have the
enzymes to catalyze the hydrolysis of -glycosidic bonds.
CH2OH
O
CH2OH
CH2OH
CH2OH
O
...
O
O
1 O
OH
...
O
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
(1
4)
10-18
Homework Problems
10.1 Draw Fisher projection formulas for each of the following and indicate each
chiral carbon with asterisks (*).
a. an aldotetrose
b. a ketotetrose
c. an aldohexose
d. a ketohexose
CHO
H
OH
OH
CHO
CHO
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
CH2OH
CH2OH
CH2OH
CH2OH
b.
a.
c.
d.
10.3 Draw a Fisher projection for the mirror image of each of the following
monosaccharides.
CHO
CH2OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
HO
CH2OH
HO
HO
HO
HO
OH
OH
CH2OH
CH2OH
a.
CHO
CH2OH
CH2OH
b.
c.
d.
10-19
10.4 Identify each of the following as an or a form and draw the structural
formula of the other anomer:
CH2OH
HOCH2
CH2OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
CH2OH
HOCH2
O
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
a.
OH
c.
b.
OH
d.
O
OH
O
CH2
OH
O
OH
OH
OH
OH
10.6 Describe the structural similarities and differences between the following pairs
of polysaccharides:
a. Glycogen and amylopectin
b. Amylose and cellulose
10-20