Carbohydrate chemistry
This article needs additional citations for verification. (April 2022) |
It has been suggested that this article be merged into Carbohydrate. (Discuss) Proposed since January 2024. |
Carbohydrate chemistry is a subdiscipline of chemistry primarily concerned with the detection, synthesis, structure, and function of carbohydrates.[1] Due to the general structure of carbohydrates, their synthesis is often preoccupied with the selective formation of glycosidic linkages and the selective reaction of hydroxyl groups; as a result, it relies heavily on the use of protecting groups.
Monosaccharides[edit]
Individual saccharide residues are termed monosaccharides.
Carbohydrate synthesis[edit]
Carbohydrate synthesis is a sub-field of organic chemistry concerned specifically with the generation of natural and unnatural carbohydrate structures. This can include the synthesis of monosaccharide residues or structures containing more than one monosaccharide, known as oligosaccharides.
Glycosidic bond formation[edit]
Protecting groups[edit]
- Carbohydrate acetalisation
- Trimethylsilyl
- Benzyl Ether
- para-methoxybenzyl ether
Oligosaccharides[edit]
Reactions of carbohydrates[edit]
Carbohydrates are reactants in many organic reactions. For example:
- Cyanohydrin reaction
- Lobry-de Bruyn-van Ekenstein transformation
- Amadori rearrangement
- Wohl degradation
- Tipson-Cohen reaction
- Ferrier rearrangement
- Ferrier II reaction
Functions of carbohydrates[edit]
Carbohydrates have four major functions within the body:
- Energy supply, particularly for the brain in the form of glucose
- Avoiding the breakdown of amino acids for energy
- Avoiding ketosis from the breakdown of fatty acids
- Cellular and protein recognition
Energy supply, particularly for the brain in the form of glucose[edit]
Avoiding the breakdown of amino acids for energy[edit]
Avoiding ketosis from the breakdown of fatty acids[edit]
Cellular and protein recognition[edit]
Glycoprotein hormones may be removed by the liver from the bloodstream when the passage of time causes the breaking-off of carbohydrates from the glycoproteins.[citation needed]
See also[edit]
Carbohydrate structure[edit]
- Anomeric effect
- Carbohydrate
- Carbohydrate conformation
- Disaccharide
- Glycosidic bond
- Monosaccharide
- Polysaccharide
Carbohydrate function and biology[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ Ruppersberg, Klaus; Rautenstrauch, Hanne; Thomsen, Stefan (5 April 2022). "Know Thy Carbs! Safer Carbohydrate Detection Methods for School Labs – Part 1". ChemistryViews. doi:10.1002/chemv.202200022. S2CID 247988541.
External links[edit]
- Media related to Carbohydrate chemistry at Wikimedia Commons
- Functions of Carbohydrates