In: Chemistry
Which carbohydrate is converted by the human body to glucose by conversion of a carbonyl to an enol, then back to a carbonyl?
ANS-, the formulas of many carbohydrates can be
written as carbon hydrates,
Cn(H2O)n, hence their name. The
carbohydrates are a major source of metabolic energy, both for
plants and for animals that depend on plants for food. Aside from
the sugars and starches that meet this vital nutritional role,
carbohydrates also serve as a structural material (cellulose), a
component of the energy transport compound ATP, recognition sites
on cell surfaces, and one of three essential components of DNA and
RNA.
Carbohydrates are called saccharides or, if they
are relatively small, sugars.
Carbohydrates have been given non-systematic names, although the suffix ose is generally used. The most common carbohydrate is glucose (C6H12O6). Applying the terms defined above, glucose is a monosaccharide, an aldohexose (note that the function and size classifications are combined in one word) and a reducing sugar. The general structure of glucose and many other aldohexoses was established by simple chemical reactions. The following diagram illustrates the kind of evidence considered, although some of the reagents shown here are different from those used by the original scientists.
Hot hydriodic acid (HI) was often used to reductively remove
oxygen functional groups from a molecule, and in the case of
glucose this treatment gave hexane (in low yield). From this it was
concluded that the six carbons are in an unbranched chain. The
presence of an aldehyde carbonyl group was deduced from cyanohydrin
formation, its reduction to the hexa-alcohol sorbitol, also called
glucitol, and mild oxidation to the mono-carboxylic acid,
glucuronic acid. Somewhat stronger oxidation by dilute nitric acid
gave the diacid, glucaric acid, supporting the proposal of a
six-carbon chain. The five oxygens remaining in glucose after the
aldehyde was accounted for were thought to be in hydroxyl groups,
since a penta-acetate derivative could be made. These hydroxyl
groups were assigned, one each, to the last five carbon atoms,
because geminal hydroxyl groups are normally unstable relative to
the carbonyl compound formed by loss of water. By clicking on the
above diagram, it will change to display the suggested products and
the gross structure of glucose. The four middle carbon atoms in the
glucose chain are centers of chirality and are colored red.
Glucose and other saccharides are extensively cleaved by periodic
acid, thanks to the abundance of vicinal diol moieties in their
structure. This oxidative cleavage, known as the Malaprade
reaction is particularly useful for the analysis of
selective O-substituted derivatives of saccharides, since ether
functions do not react. The stoichiometry of aldohexose cleavage is
shown in the following equation.
HOCH2(CHOH)4CHO + 5 HIO4 | ——> | H2C=O + 5 HCO2H + 5
HIO3 |