Molecule of the Day: Other Sugars | ||||||||||||||
Carbohydrates can be designated with a variety of special terms that you need to be familiar with. Pentose – a carbohydrate
with five carbon atoms |
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These terms are combined to give full descriptions of individual carbohydrates. For example, glucose is an aldohexose. When it cyclizes, it forms a pyranose ring. The full description of the alpha anomer of cyclized glucose is “alpha-D-glucopyranose”, also called simply “alpha-D-glucose”. Similarly the beta anomer is referred to as “beta-D-glucopyranose”, also called simply “beta-D-glucose.” | ||||||||||||||
Five-membered rings are the most stable form of some carbohydrates. For example D-fructose, a ketohexose, forms a stable five-membered ring. Ribose, a common aldopentose, also forms a five-membered ring. Ribose is important in biochemistry because it is the “sugar” part of the RNA bases such as cytidine. Some sugars are missing –OH groups, and these are indicated by the number corresponding to the location of the missing –OH group, followed by the term “deoxy” meaning “without oxygen”. 2-Deoxy-D-ribose is the “sugar” on DNA bases, for example the base 2’-deoxycytidine. |
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