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Cycloalkanes and Their Stereochemistry

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Title: Cycloalkanes and Their Stereochemistry


1
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2
Carbohydrates
  • 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

3
Carbohydrates
  • Carbohydrates act as chemical intermediates by
    which solar energy is stored and used to support
    life on earth

4
21.1 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

5
Classification 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-

6
21.2 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

7
Depicting Carbohydrate Stereochemistry Fischer
Projections
  • A Fischer projection of (R)-glyderaldehyde

8
Depicting 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

9
Depicting 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

10
Depicting 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

11
Depicting 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

12
Depicting 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

13
Worked Example 21.1Assigning R or S
Configuration to a Fischer Projection
  • Assign R or S configuration to the following
    Fischer projection of alanine

14
Worked 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

15
Worked 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

16
Worked 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

17
21.3 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)

18
D,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

19
D,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

20
21.4 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

21
Configurations 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

22
Configurations of the Aldoses
  • Configurations of D-aldoses
  • -OH groups on right side (R) or left side (L) of
    the chain

23
Configurations 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.

24
Worked Example 21.2Drawing a Fischer
Projection
  • Draw a Fischer projection of L-fructose.

25
Worked 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.

26
Worked Example 21.2Drawing a Fischer
Projection
  • Solution

27
21.5 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

28
Cyclic 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

29
Cyclic 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

30
Cyclic 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

31
Cyclic 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

32
Cyclic 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

33
Cyclic 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

34
Cyclic 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

35
Worked 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.

36
Worked 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

37
Worked Example 21.3Drawing the Chair
Conformation of an Aldohexose
  • Solution

38
Worked Example 21.4Drawing the Chair
Conformation of an Aldohexose
  • Draw b-L-glucopyranose in its more stable chair
    conformation

39
Worked 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

40
Worked Example 21.4Drawing the Chair
Conformation of an Aldohexose
  • Solution

41
21.6 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

42
Reactions 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

43
Reactions 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

44
Reactions 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

45
Reactions 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

46
Reactions 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

47
Reactions 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

48
Reactions 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

49
Reactions 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

50
Reactions 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)

51
Reactions 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)

52
Reactions 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

53
Reactions 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

54
Reactions of Monosaccharides
  • Enzymatic oxidation at the CH2OH end of aldoses
    yields monocarboxylic acids called uronic acids
  • No affect on the CHO group

55
21.7 The Eight Essential Monosaccharides
  • Humans need to obtain eight monosaccharides for
    proper functioning
  • All are used for synthesis of glycoconjugate
    components of cell walls

56
The 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

57
The Eight Essential Monosaccharides
  • All eight essential monosaccharides all
    synthesized from D-glucose
  • Galactose, glucose, and mannose are simple
    aldohexoses
  • Xylose is an aldopentose

58
21.8 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

59
Disaccharides
  • 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

60
Disaccharides
  • 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

61
Disaccharides
  • 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

62
Disaccharides
  • 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

63
Disaccharides
  • 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

64
21.9 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

65
Polysaccharides 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

66
Polysaccharides 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

67
Polysaccharides and Their Synthesis
68
Polysaccharides and Their Synthesis
69
Polysaccharides 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

70
Polysaccharides 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

71
Polysaccharides 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

72
Polysaccharides 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
73
21.10 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

74
Cell-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

75
Summary of Reactions
  • Summary of Carbohydrate Reactions
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