Biochemistry 2280A Chapter Notes - Chapter 2: Chitin, Glycolipid, Hydrolysis

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Sugars are both energy sources and subunits of polysaccharides. Simplest sugars are monosaccharides compounds with general formula (ch2o)n, where n is usually 3, 4, 5, or 6. Carbohydrates: are sugars and the larger molecules made from monosaccharides. The formula does not define glucose as the same set of atoms can be joined together by covalent bonds in different ways. Thus glucose can be converted into a different sugar mannose or galactose simply by switching the orientations of specific -oh groups relative to the rest of the molecule. Each of the se sugars can exist in either the d-form or the l-form which are mirror images of each other; sets of molecules with the same chemical formula but different structures isomers. Mirror image pairs of such molecules: optical isomers. Monosaccharides can be linked by covalent bonds glycosidic bonds to form larger carbohydrates. 2 monosaccharides linked together: disaccharide (e. g glucose) Larger sugar polymers: oligosaccharides (shorter chains like trisaccharides, tetra, 2 to 10)

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