Biochemistry 2280A Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Mannose, Galactose, Monosaccharide

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In monosaccharides you"ll always have c1 with two oxygens bonded to it: cyclic version is favourable (especially for hexoses) If numbers aren"t there always look for the carbon with the two oxygens. If it closes again it can go to the opposite form. In solution they are swapping back and forth between alpha and beta. Cyclization of fructose: forms a 5 membered ring, note that we number from the side closest to the carbonyl group. Pyranoses vs. furanoses: pyranoses are 6-membered rings (e. g. a-d-glucopyranose, furanoses are 5-membered rings (e. g. a-d-fructofuranose, pyranose/furanose comes from the molecule pyran and furan, always compare the oh group to the last ch2oh group when determining alpha vs beta. The carbonyl group is a reducing agent. If this galactose was in the alpha configuration a-lactose versus b-lactose: two possible structure for lactose only differ whether the glucose part is in alpha or beta configuration. One is called alpha lactose and the other is beta lactose.

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