Title: Cycloalkanes and Their Stereochemistry
1(No Transcript)
2Carbohydrates
- Carbohydrate
- Broad class of polyhydroxylated aldehydes and
ketones commonly called sugars - Synthesized by green plants during photosynthesis
- Name derived from glucose
- Glucose was the first simple carbohydrate
obtained in pure form - Molecular formula of glucose, C6H12O6, was
thought to be a hydrate of carbon, C6(H2O)6 - 50 of the dry weight of earths biomass
consists of glucose polymers
3Carbohydrates
- Carbohydrates act as chemical intermediates by
which solar energy is stored and used to support
life on earth
421.1 Classification of Carbohydrates
- Carbohydrates are classed as simple or complex
- Simple sugars , or monosaccharides
- Carbohydrates like glucose and fructose that
cannot be converted into more simple sugars by
hydrolysis - Complex carbohydrates
- Made up of two or more simple sugars
- Sucrose is a disaccharide comprised of one
glucose and one fructose - Cellulose is a polysaccharide comprised of
several thousand linked glucose units
5Classification of Carbohydrates
- Monosaccharides are classified as aldoses or
ketoses - -ose suffix designates a carbohydrate
- aldo- prefix identifies an aldehyde carbonyl
group in the sugar - keto- prefix identifies a ketone carbonyl group
in the sugar - Number of carbons indicated by the numerical
prefix tri-, tetra-, pent-, hex-
621.2 Depicting Carbohydrate Stereochemistry
Fischer Projections
- Fischer projections
- Suggested by Emil Fischer (1891)
- Method to project a tetrahedral carbon onto a
flat surface - Tetrahedral carbon represented by two crossed
lines - Horizontal lines come out of the page
- Vertical lines go back into page
7Depicting Carbohydrate Stereochemistry Fischer
Projections
- A Fischer projection of (R)-glyderaldehyde
8Depicting Carbohydrate Stereochemistry Fischer
Projections
- Rules for manipulating Fischer projections
- A Fischer projection can be rotated on the page
by 180, but not by 90 or 270 - Only a 180 rotation maintains the Fischer
convention by keeping the same substituent groups
going into and coming out of the plane
9Depicting Carbohydrate Stereochemistry Fischer
Projections
- A 90 rotation breaks the Fischer convention by
exchanging the groups that go into and come out
of the plane - A 90 or a 270 rotation changes the
representation to the enantiomer
10Depicting Carbohydrate Stereochemistry Fischer
Projections
- A Fischer projection can have one group held
steady while the other three rotate in either a
clockwise or a counterclockwise direction - Effect is to simply rotate around a single bond
11Depicting Carbohydrate Stereochemistry Fischer
Projections
- Three steps for assigning R,S stereochemical
designations in Fischer projections - Assign priorities to the four substituents in the
usual way - Place the group of lowest priority, usually H, at
the top of the Fischer projection by using one of
the allowed motions - The lowest-priority group is thus oriented back
away from viewer - Determine the direction of rotation 1?2?3 of the
remaining three groups and assign R or S
configuration
12Depicting Carbohydrate Stereochemistry Fischer
Projections
- Carbohydrates with more than one chirality center
are shown in Fischer projection by stacking the
centers on top of one another - By convention the carbonyl carbon is always
placed at or near the top
13Worked Example 21.1Assigning R or S
Configuration to a Fischer Projection
- Assign R or S configuration to the following
Fischer projection of alanine
14Worked Example 21.1Assigning R or S
Configuration to a Fischer Projection
- Strategy
- Follow the steps listed in the text
- Assign priorities to the four substituents on the
chiral carbon - Manipulate the Fischer projection to place the
group of lowest priority at the top by carrying
out one of the allowed motions - Determine the direction 1?2?3 of the remaining
three groups
15Worked Example 21.1Assigning R or S
Configuration to a Fischer Projection
- Solution
- The priorities of the groups are (1) NH2, (2)
CO2H, (3) CH3, and (4) H - To bring the lowest priority (H ) to the top we
might want to hold the CH3 group steady while
rotating the other three groups counterclockwise
16Worked Example 21.1Assigning R or S
Configuration to a Fischer Projection
- Going from first- to second- to third-highest
priority requires a counterclockwise turn,
corresponding to S stereochemistry
1721.3 D,L Sugars
- Glyceraldehyde
- Simplest aldose
- One chirality center
- Two enantiomeric (mirror-image) forms
- Only dextrorotatory enantiomer ()-glyceraldehyde
occurs naturally - ()-Glyceraldehyde has the R configuration
- (R)-()-glyceraldehyde is also referred to as
D-glyderaldehyde (D for dextrorotatory) - (S)-()-glyceraldehyde in also known as
L-glyceraldehyde (L for levorotatory)
18D,L Sugars
- Virtually all naturally occurring monosaccharides
have the same R stereochemical configuration as
D-glyceraldehyde at the chirality center farthest
from the carbonyl group - In Fischer projections most naturally occurring
sugars have the hydroxyl group at the bottom
chirality center pointing to the right - Such compounds known as D sugars
19D,L Sugars
- L sugars have an S stereochemical configuration
at the chirality center farthest from the
carbonyl group - OH group pointing to the left in Fischer
projections - An L sugar is the mirror image (enantiomer) of
the corresponding D sugar - D and L sugars can be either dextrorotatory or
levorotatory - D and L designations only specify the
stereochemical configuration at the one chirality
center farthest away from the carbonyl group -
2021.4 Configurations of the Aldoses
- Aldotetroses are four-carbon sugars with two
chirality centers and an aldehyde carbonyl group - 22 4 possible stereoisomeric aldotetroses
- Two D,L pairs or enantiomers named erythrose and
threose - Aldopentoses are five-carbon sugars with three
chirality centers and an aldehyde carbonyl group - 23 8 possible stereoisomeric aldopentoses
- Four D,L pairs of enantiomers named ribose,
arabinose, xylose, and lyxose - All but lyxose occur widely
- D-Ribose is an important constituent in RNA
- L-Arabinose is found in plants
- D-Xylose is found in both plants and animals
21Configurations of the Aldoses
- Aldohexoses are six-carbon sugars with four
chirality centers and an aldehyde carbonyl group - 24 16 possible stereoisomeric aldohexoses
- Eight D,L pairs of enantiomers named allose,
altrose, glucose, mannose, gulose, idose,
galactose, and talose - D-Glucose from starch and cellulose and
D-galactose from gums and fruit pectins occur
widely in nature
22Configurations of the Aldoses
- Configurations of D-aldoses
- -OH groups on right side (R) or left side (L) of
the chain
23Configurations of the Aldoses
- Remembering the names and structures
- of the eight D aldohexoses
- Set up eight Fischer projections with the CHO
group on top and the CH2OH group at the bottom - At C5, place all eight OH groups to the right (D
series) - At C4, alternate four OH groups to the right,
four to the left - At C3, alternate two OH groups to the right, two
to the left - At C2, alternate OH groups right, left, right,
left - Name the eight isomers using the mnemonic All
altruists gladly make gum in gallon tanks. - (Structures of the four D aldopentoses Ribs are
extra lean.
24Worked Example 21.2Drawing a Fischer
Projection
- Draw a Fischer projection of L-fructose.
25Worked Example 21.2Drawing a Fischer
Projection
- Strategy
- Since L-fructose is the enantiomer of D-fructose,
look at the structure of D-fructose and reverse
the configuration at each chirality center.
26Worked Example 21.2Drawing a Fischer
Projection
2721.5 Cyclic Structures of Monosaccharides
Anomers
- Aldehydes and ketones undergo a rapid and
reversible nucleophilic addition reaction with
alcohols to form hemiacetals - Monosaccharides undergo intramolecular
nucleophilic additions - The carbonyl and hydroxyl groups of the same
molecule react to form cyclic hemiacetals
28Cyclic Structures of Monosaccharides Anomers
- Glucose exists in aqueous solution primarily in
the six-membered, pyranose ring form - Results from intramolecular nucleophilic addition
of the OH group at C5 to the C1 carbonyl group - The name pyranose is derived from pyran
- Pyran is the name of the unsaturated six-membered
cyclic ether - Pyranose rings have chairlike geometry with axial
and equatorial substituents
29Cyclic Structures of Monosaccharides Anomers
- Pyranose rings are drawn placing the hemiacetal
oxygen at the right rear - OH group of hemiacetal can either be on the top
or bottom face of the ring - Terminal CH2OH group is on the top face of the
ring in D sugars and on the bottom face of the
ring in L sugars - When an open-chain monosaccharide cyclizes to a
pyranose ring form a new chirality center is
generated at the former carbonyl carbon - The two diastereomers are called anomers and the
hemiacetal carbon atom is referred to as the
anomeric center
30Cyclic Structures of Monosaccharides Anomers
- Two anomers formed by cyclization of glucose
- The molecule whose
- newly formed OH
- group at C1 is cis
- to the oxygen atom
- on the lowest chirality
- center (C5) in a Fischer
- projection is the
- a anomer
- The molecule whose
- newly formed OH
- group at C1 is trans
- to the oxygen atom
- on the lowest chirality
- center (C5) in a Fischer
- projection is the
- b anomer
31Cyclic Structures of Monosaccharides Anomers
- Some monosaccharides also exist in a
five-membered cyclic hemiacetal form called a
furanose - D-Fructose exists in both the pyranose and the
furanose forms - The two pyranose anomers result from addition of
C6 OH group to the C2 carbonyl - The two furanose anomers result from addition of
C5 OH group to the C2 carbonyl
32Cyclic Structures of Monosaccharides Anomers
- Both anomers of D-glucopyranose can be
crystallized and purified - Pure a-D-glucopyranose
- Melting point 146 C
- aD specific rotation 112.2
- Pure b-D-glucopyranose
- Melting point 148-155 C
- bD specific rotation 18.7
33Cyclic Structures of Monosaccharides Anomers
- When a sample of either pure anomer of
D-glucopyranose is dissolved in water its optical
rotation slowly changes and reaches a constant
value of 52.6 - The specific rotation of a-D-glucopyranose
decreases from 112.2 to 52.6 when dissolved in
aqueous solution - The specific rotation of b-D-glucopyranose
increases from 18.7 to 52.6 when dissolved in
aqueous solution - This change in optical rotation is due to the
slow conversion of the pure anomers into a 37
63 equilibrium mixture and is known as
mutarotation
34Cyclic Structures of Monosaccharides Anomers
- Mutarotation of D-glucopyranose
- Mutarotation occurs by a reversible ring opening
of each anomer to the open-chain aldehyde
followed by reclosure - Mutarotation is catalyzed by both acid and base
35Worked Example 21.3Drawing the Chair
Conformation of an Aldohexose
- D-Mannose differs from D-glucose in it
stereochemistry at C2. Draw D-mannose in its
chairlike pyranose form.
36Worked Example 21.3Drawing the Chair
Conformation of an Aldohexose
- Strategy
- First draw a Fischer projection of D-mannose
- Lay it on its side and curl it around so that the
CHO group (C1) is toward the right front and the
CH2OH group (C6) is toward the left rear - Connect the OH at C5 to the C1 carbonyl group to
form the pyranose ring - In drawing the chair form raise the leftmost
carbon (C4) up and drop the rightmost carbon (C1)
down
37Worked Example 21.3Drawing the Chair
Conformation of an Aldohexose
38Worked Example 21.4Drawing the Chair
Conformation of an Aldohexose
- Draw b-L-glucopyranose in its more stable chair
conformation
39Worked Example 21.4Drawing the Chair
Conformation of an Aldohexose
- Strategy
- Its probably easiest to begin by drawing the
chair conformation of b-D-glucopyranose - Then draw its mirror-image L enantiomer by
changing the stereochemistry at every position on
the ring - Carry out a ring-flip to give the more stable
chair conformation - Note that the CH2OH group is on the bottom face
of the ring in the L enantiomer
40Worked Example 21.4Drawing the Chair
Conformation of an Aldohexose
4121.6 Reactions of Monosaccharides
- Ester and Ether Formation
- Monosaccharides exhibit chemistry similar to
simple alcohols - Usually soluble in water but insoluble in organic
solvents - Do not easily form crystals upon removal of water
- Can be converted into esters and ethers
- Ester and ether derivatives are soluble in
organic solvents and are easily purified and
crystallized
42Reactions of Monosaccharides
- Esterification is normally carried out by
treating the carbohydrate with an acid chloride
or acid anhydride in presence of base - All OH groups react including the anomeric OH
group
43Reactions of Monosaccharides
- Carbohydrates are converted into ethers by
treatment with an alkyl halide in the presence of
base the Williamson ether synthesis - Silver oxide (Ag2O) gives high yields of ethers
without degrading the sensitive carbohydrate
molecules
44Reactions of Monosaccharides
- Glycoside Formation
- Hemiacetals yield acetals upon treatment with an
alcohol and an acid catalyst - Treatment of monosaccharide hemiacetals with an
alcohol and acid catalyst yields an acetal,
called a glycoside
45Reactions of Monosaccharides
- Glycosides are named by first citing the alkyl
group and then replacing the ose ending of the
sugar with oside - Glycosides are stable in neutral water and do not
mutarotate - Glycosides hydrolyze back to free monosaccharide
plus alcohol upon treatment with aqueous acid - Glycosides are abundant in nature
- Digitoxigenin used for treatment of heart
disease
46Reactions of Monosaccharides
- Biological Ester Formation Phosphorylation
- Glycoconjugates
- Carbohydrates linked through their anomeric
center to other biological molecules such as
lipids (glycolipids) or proteins (glycoproteins) - Constitute components of cell walls and
participate in cell-type recognition and
identification
47Reactions of Monosaccharides
- Glucoconjugate formation occurs by reaction of
the lipid or protein with a glycosyl nucleoside
diphosphate - Glycosyl nucleoside diphosphate is initially
formed by phosphorylation of monosaccharide with
ATP to give glycosyl phosphate
48Reactions of Monosaccharides
- Reaction with UTP forms a glycosyl uridine
5'-diphosphate - Nucleophilic substitution by an OH (or NH2)
group on a protein then gives the glycoprotein
49Reactions of Monosaccharides
- Reduction of Monosaccharides
- Treatment of an aldose or ketose with NaBH4
reduces it to a polyalcohol called an alditol - Reduction occurs by reaction of the open-chain
form present in aldehyde/ketone
hemiacetal equilibrium - D-Glucitol, also known as D-sorbitol, is present
in many fruits and berries and is used as a
sweetener and sugar substitute
50Reactions of Monosaccharides
- Oxidation of Monosaccharides
- Aldoses are easily oxidized to yield
corresponding carboxylic acids called aldonic
acids - Oxidizing agents include
- Tollens reagent (Ag in aqueous NH3)
- Gives shiny metallic silver mirror on walls of
reaction tube or flask - Fehlings reagent (Cu2 in aqueous sodium
tartrate) - Gives reddish precipitate of Cu2O
- Benedicts reagent (Cu2 in aqueous sodium
citrate) - Gives reddish precipitate of Cu2O
- (All three reactions serve as simple chemical
tests for reducing sugars)
51Reactions of Monosaccharides
- Fructose is a ketose that is a reducing sugar
- Undergoes two base-catalyzed keto-enol
tautomerizations that result in conversion to a
mixture of aldoses (glucose and mannose)
52Reactions of Monosaccharides
- Br2 is a mild oxidant that gives good yields of
aldonic acid products - Preferred over Tollens reagent because alkaline
conditions in Tollens oxidation cause
decomposition of the carbohydrate
53Reactions of Monosaccharides
- Aldoses are oxidized in warm, dilute HNO3 to
dicarboxylic acids called aldaric acids - Both the CHO group at C1 and the terminal CH2OH
group are oxidized
54Reactions of Monosaccharides
- Enzymatic oxidation at the CH2OH end of aldoses
yields monocarboxylic acids called uronic acids - No affect on the CHO group
5521.7 The Eight Essential Monosaccharides
- Humans need to obtain eight monosaccharides for
proper functioning - All are used for synthesis of glycoconjugate
components of cell walls
56The Eight Essential Monosaccharides
- Fucose is a deoxy sugar
- The OH group at C6 is replaced by H
- N-Acetylglycosamine and N-acetylgalactosamine are
amide derivatives of amino sugars - The OH group at C2 is replaced by an NH2 group
- N-Acetylneuraminic acid is the parent compound of
sialic acids
57The Eight Essential Monosaccharides
- All eight essential monosaccharides all
synthesized from D-glucose - Galactose, glucose, and mannose are simple
aldohexoses - Xylose is an aldopentose
5821.8 Disaccharides
- Cellobiose and Maltose
- Disaccharides contain a glycosidic acetal bond
between the anomeric carbon of one sugar and an
OH group at any position on another sugar - A glycosidic bond between C1 of the first sugar
and the OH at C4 of the second sugar is a common
glycosidic link called a 1?4 link
59Disaccharides
- Maltose consists of two a-D-glucopyranose units
joined by a 1?4-a-glycoside bond - Maltose is the disaccharide obtained by
enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis of starch - Cellobiose consists of two b-D-glucopyranose
units joined by a 1?4-b-glycoside bond - Cellobiose is the disaccharide obtained by
partial hydrolysis of cellulose
60Disaccharides
- Maltose and cellobiose are both reducing sugars
because the anomeric carbons on the right-hand
glucopyranose units have hemiacetal groups and
are in equilibrium with the aldehyde forms - Maltose and cellobiose also exhibit mutarotation
of a and b anomers - Maltose is digested by humans and is fermented
readily by yeast - Cellobiose cannot be digested by humans and is
not fermented by yeast
61Disaccharides
- Lactose
- Lactose is a disaccharide that occurs naturally
in human and cows milk - Lactose is a reducing sugar and exhibits
mutarotation - Lactose contains a 1?4-b-link between C1 of
galactose and C4 of glucose
62Disaccharides
- Sucrose
- Sucrose is ordinary table sugar and is among the
most abundant pure organic chemicals in the world - Sucrose is obtained from sugar cane (20 sucrose
by weight) or from sugar beets (15 sucrose by
weight) - Sucrose is a disaccharide that consists of 1
equivalent of glucose and 1 equivalent of
fructose - 11 mixture often referred to as invert sugar
because the sign of optical rotation inverts
(changes) during hydrolysis from sucrose (aD
66.5) to a glucose/fructose mixture (aD
-22.0) - Honeybees have enzymes called invertases that
catalyze the hydrolysis of sucrose - Honey is primarily a mixture of sucrose, glucose,
and fructose
63Disaccharides
- Sucrose is not a reducing sugar and does not
undergo mutarotation - Glucose and fructose are joined by a glycoside
link at the anomeric carbons of both sugars, C1
of glucose and C2 of fructose
6421.9 Polysaccharides and Their Synthesis
- Polysaccharides are complex carbohydrates in
which tens or even thousands of simple sugars are
linked together through glycoside bonds - Only one free anomeric OH on end of long
polymeric chain - Not reducing sugars
- Do not exhibit noticeable mutarotation
- Cellulose and starch are the two most widely
occurring polysaccharides
65Polysaccharides and Their Synthesis
- Cellulose
- Cellulose consists of several thousand D-glucose
units linked by 1?4-b-glycoside bonds like those
in cellobiose - Used by nature to impart strength and rigidity to
plants - Used commercially as raw material for cellulose
acetate (acetate rayon) and cellulose nitrate
(guncotton) the major ingredient of smokeless gun
powder
66Polysaccharides and Their Synthesis
- Starch and Glycogen
- Starch is a polymer of glucose found in potatoes,
corn, and cereal grains - Monosaccharide units are linked by
1?4-a-glycoside bonds like those in maltose - Starch is separated into two fractions
- Amylose accounts for about 20 by weight of
starch - Amylopectin accounts for about 80 by weight of
starch - Amylopectin is nonlinear and contains
1?6-a-glycoside branches approximately every 25
glucose units
67Polysaccharides and Their Synthesis
68Polysaccharides and Their Synthesis
69Polysaccharides and Their Synthesis
- Starch is digested in the mouth and stomach by
a-glycosidase enzymes which catalyze the
hydrolysis of a-glycoside links but leave the
b-glycoside links in cellulose untouched - Humans can digest potatoes and grains but cannot
digest grasses and leaves - Glycogen is a polysaccharide that serves as
long-term storage of energy for the human body - Glycogen contains both 1?4 and 1?6 links
70Polysaccharides and Their Synthesis
- Polysaccharide Synthesis
- Glycal assemble method
- A glycal is an unsaturated sugar with a C1-C2
double bond - The C6 OH group is protected as a silyl ether
(R3Si-O-R) - The C4 and C3 OH groups are protected as a
cyclic carbonate ester - Carbons C1 and C2 are epoxidized
71Polysaccharides and Their Synthesis
- Treatment of the protected glycal with another
glycal containing a free C6 OH group in the
presence of ZnCl2 yields a dissacharide - The dissacharide can be epoxidized and treated
with a third glycal to yield a trisaccharide - Process is continued to prepare a polysaccharide
72Polysaccharides and Their Synthesis
- Lewis Y hexasaccharide
- Synthesized complex polysaccharide
- Tumor marker that is currently being explored as
a potential cancer vaccine
Gal
Gal
GlcNAc
Glc
7321.10 Cell-Surface Carbohydrates and
Carbohydrate Vaccines
- Small polysaccharide chains covalently bound by
glycosidic links to OH or NH2 groups on
proteins act as biochemical markers on cell
surfaces - If human blood from one donor type (A, B, AB, or
O) is transfused into a recipient with another
blood type the red blood cells clump together, or
agglutinate - Agglutination results from the presence of
polysaccharide markers on the surface of the cells
74Cell-Surface Carbohydrates and Carbohydrate
Vaccines
- Types A, B, and O red blood cells each have their
own unique markers, or antigenic determinants,
and type AB red blood cells have both A and B
markers
75Summary of Reactions
- Summary of Carbohydrate Reactions