A
carbohydrate is an
organic compound with general formula
C
m(H
2O)
n, that
is, consisting only of
carbon,
hydrogen and
oxygen, the last
two in the 2:1
atom ratio. Carbohydrates can be
viewed as
hydrates of carbon, hence their
name.
The term is most commonly used in
biochemistry, where it is essentially a synonym
of
saccharide, a large family of
natural carbohydrates that fill numerous roles in
living things, such as the storage and transport of
energy (e.g.,
starch,
glycogen) and structural components (e.g.,
cellulose in plants and
chitin in arthropods). This word comes from the
Greek σάκχαρον
(
sákcharon), meaning "
sugar".
Saccharides and their derivatives include many other important
biomolecules that play key roles in the
immune system,
fertilization,
pathogenesis,
blood
clotting, and
development.
In
food science and in many informal
contexts, the term
carbohydrate often means any
food that is particularly rich in starch (such
as
cereals,
bread and
pasta) or
sugar (such as
candy,
jam and
desserts).
While the scientific nomenclature of carbohydrates is complex, the
names of carbohydrates very often end in the suffix
-ose.
Structure
Formerly the name "carbohydrate" was used in
chemistry for any compound with the formula
C
m(H
2O)
n.
Following this definition, some chemists considered
formaldehyde CH
2O to be the simplest
carbohydrate, while others claimed that title for
glycolaldehyde Today the term is generally
understood in the biochemistry sense, which excludes compounds with
only one or two carbons.
Natural saccharides are generally built of simple carbohydrates
called
monosaccharides with general
formula (CH
2O)
n where
n is
three or more. A typical monosaccharide has the structure
H-(CHOH)
x(C=O)-(CHOH)
y-H,
that is, an
aldehyde or
ketone with many
hydroxyl
groups added, usually one on each
carbon
atom that is not part of the aldehyde or ketone
functional group. Examples of
monosaccharides are
glucose,
fructose, and
glyceraldehyde. However, some biological
substances commonly called "monosaccharides" do not conform to this
formula (e.g.,
uronic acids and
deoxy-sugars such as
fucose), and there are
many chemicals that do conform to this formula but are not
considered to be monosaccharides (e.g., formaldehyde
CH
2O and
inositol
(CH
2O)
6).
The open-chain form of a monosaccharide often coexists with a
closed ring form where the
oxygen of the
carbonyl group C=O is
replaced by an internal -O- bridge.
Monosaccharides can be linked together into what are called
polysaccharides (or
oligosaccharides) in a large variety of
ways. Many carbohydrates contain one or more modified
monosaccharide units that have had one or more groups replaced or
removed. For example,
deoxyribose, a
component of
DNA, is a modified version of
ribose;
chitin is
composed of repeating units of
N-acetylglucosamine, a
nitrogen-containing form of glucose.
Monosaccharides
Monosaccharides are the simplest carbohydrates in that they cannot
be hydrolyzed to smaller carbohydrates. They are aldehydes or
ketones with two or more hydroxyl groups. The general
chemical formula of an unmodified
monosaccharide is (C•H
2O)
n, literally a
"carbon hydrate." Monosaccharides are important fuel molecules as
well as building blocks for nucleic acids. The smallest
monosaccharides, for which n = 3, are dihydroxyacetone and D- and
L-glyceraldehyde.
Classification of monosaccharides

The
α and
β anomers of glucose.
Note the position of the anomeric carbon (red or green) relative to
the CH
2OH group bound to carbon 5: they are either on
the opposite sides (α), or the same side (β).
Monosaccharides are classified according to three different
characteristics: the placement of its
carbonyl group, the number of
carbon atoms it contains, and its
chiral handedness. If the carbonyl
group is an
aldehyde, the monosaccharide is
an
aldose; if the carbonyl group is a
ketone, the monosaccharide is a
ketose. Monosaccharides with three carbon atoms are
called
trioses, those with four are called
tetroses, five are called
pentoses, six are
hexoses, and
so on.
These two systems of classification are often combined. For example, glucose is an aldohexose (a six-carbon aldehyde), ribose is an aldopentose (a five-carbon aldehyde), and fructose is a ketohexose (a six-carbon ketone).
Each carbon atom bearing a
hydroxyl
group (-OH), with the exception of the first and last carbons,
are
asymmetric, making them
stereocenter with two possible
configurations each (R or S). Because of this asymmetry, a number
of
isomers may exist for any given
monosaccharide formula. The aldohexose D-glucose, for example, has
the formula (C·H
2O)
6, of which all but two of
its six carbons atoms are stereogenic, making D-glucose one of
2
4 = 16 possible
stereoisomers. In the case of
glyceraldehyde, an aldotriose, there is one
pair of possible stereoisomers, which are
enantiomers and
epimers.
1,3-dihydroxyacetone, the ketose
corresponding to the aldose glyceraldehyde, is a symmetric molecule
with no stereocenters). The assignment of D or L is made according
to the orientation of the asymmetric carbon furthest from the
carbonyl group: in a standard Fischer projection if the hydroxyl
group is on the right the molecule is a D sugar, otherwise it is an
L sugar. The "D-" and "L-" prefixes should not be confused with
"d-" or "l-", which indicate the direction that the sugar
rotates plane
polarized light. This usage of "d-" and "l-" is
no longer followed in carbohydrate chemistry.
Ring-straight chain isomerism
The aldehyde or ketone group of a straight-chain monosaccharide
will react reversibly with a hydroxyl group on a different carbon
atom to form a
hemiacetal or
hemiketal, forming a
heterocyclic ring with an oxygen bridge between
two carbon atoms. Rings with five and six atoms are called
furanose and
pyranose
forms, respectively, and exist in equilibrium with the
straight-chain form.
During the conversion from straight-chain form to cyclic form, the
carbon atom containing the carbonyl oxygen, called the
anomeric carbon, becomes a stereogenic
center with two possible configurations: The oxygen atom may take a
position either above or below the plane of the ring. The resulting
possible pair of stereoisomers are called
anomers. In the
α anomer, the -OH
substituent on the anomeric carbon rests on the opposite side
(
trans) of the ring from the
CH
2OH side branch. The alternative form, in which the
CH
2OH substituent and the anomeric hydroxyl are on the
same side (cis) of the plane of the ring, is called the
β
anomer. You can remember that the β anomer is cis by the
mnemonic, "It's always better to βe up". Because the ring and
straight-chain forms readily interconvert, both anomers exist in
equilibrium.
Use in living organisms
Monosaccharides are the major source of fuel for
metabolism, being used both as an energy source
(glucose being the most important in nature) and in
biosynthesis. When monosaccharides are not
immediately needed by many cells they are often converted to more
space efficient forms, often
polysaccharides. In many animals, including
humans, this storage form is
glycogen,
especially in liver and muscle cells. In plants,
starch is used for the same purpose.
Disaccharides
Two joined monosaccharides are called a
disaccharide and these are the simplest
polysaccharides. Examples include
sucrose
and
lactose. They are composed of two
monosaccharide units bound together by a
covalent bond known as a
glycosidic linkage formed via a
dehydration reaction, resulting in the
loss of a
hydrogen atom from one
monosaccharide and a
hydroxyl group
from the other. The
formula of
unmodified disaccharides is
C
12H
22O
11. Although there are
numerous kinds of disaccharides, a handful of disaccharides are
particularly notable.
Sucrose, pictured to the right, is the most
abundant disaccharide, and the main form in which carbohydrates are
transported in
plants. It is composed of one
D-glucose molecule and one
D-fructose molecule. The
systematic name for sucrose,
O-α-D-glucopyranosyl-(1→2)-D-fructofuranoside, indicates
four things:
- Its monosaccharides: glucose and fructose
- Their ring types: glucose is a pyranose, and fructose is a furanose
- How they are linked together: the oxygen on carbon number 1
(C1) of α-D-glucose is linked to the C2 of D-fructose.
- The -oside suffix indicates that the anomeric carbon of both monosaccharides
participates in the glycosidic bond.
Lactose, a disaccharide composed of one
D-galactose molecule and one
D-glucose molecule, occurs naturally in mammalian
milk. The
systematic
name for lactose is
O-β-D-galactopyranosyl-(1→4)-D-glucopyranose. Other
notable disaccharides include
maltose (two
D-glucoses linked α-1,4) and cellulobiose (two D-glucoses linked
β-1,4).
Oligosaccharides and polysaccharides
Oligosaccharides and polysaccharides are composed of longer chains
of monosaccharide units bound together by glycosidic bonds. The
distinction between the two is based upon the number of
monosaccharide units present in the chain. Oligosaccharides
typically contain between two and nine monosaccharide units, and
polysaccharides contain greater than ten monosaccharide units.
Definitions of how large a carbohydrate must be to fall into each
category vary according to personal opinion. Examples of
oligosaccharides include the disaccharides mentioned above, the
trisaccharide
raffinose and the
tetrasaccharide stachyose.
Oligosaccharides are found as a common form of
protein posttranslational
modification. Such posttranslational modifications include the
Lewis and ABO oligosaccharides responsible for
blood group classifications and so of tissue
incompatibilities, the alpha-Gal epitope responsible for hyperacute
rejection in xenotransplanation, and O-GlcNAc modifications.
Polysaccharides represent an important class of biological
polymers. Their
function in living organisms is usually
either structure- or storage-related.
Starch
(a polymer of glucose) is used as a storage polysaccharide in
plants, being found in the form of both
amylose and the branched
amylopectin. In animals, the
structurally-similar glucose polymer is the more densely-branched
glycogen, sometimes called 'animal starch'.
Glycogen's properties allow it to be metabolized more quickly,
which suits the active lives of moving animals.
Cellulose and
chitin
are examples of structural polysaccharides. Cellulose is used in
the
cell walls of plants and other
organisms, and is claimed to be the most abundant organic molecule
on earth. It has many uses such as a significant role in the paper
and textile industries, and is used as a feedstock for the
production of rayon (via the
viscose
process), cellulose acetate, celluloid, and nitrocellulose. Chitin
has a similar structure, but has
nitrogen-containing side branches, increasing its
strength. It is found in
arthropod
exoskeletons and in the cell walls of
some
fungi. It also has multiple uses,
including
surgical threads.
Other polysaccharides include
callose or
laminarin,
chrysolaminarin,
xylan,
mannan, fucoidan, and
galactomannan.
Nutrition
Foods high in carbohydrates include
breads,
pastas,
beans,
potatoes,
bran,
rice, and
cereals. Most such
foods are high in
starch. Carbohydrates
require less
water to digest than
proteins or
fats and are the most
common source of energy in living things. Proteins and fat are
necessary building components for body
tissue and
cells, and are also a source of energy for
most organisms.
Carbohydrates are not
essential
nutrients in humans: the body can obtain all its energy from
protein and fats. However, the brain and neurons generally cannot
burn fat and need glucose for energy; the body can make some
glucose from a few of the amino acids in protein and also from the
glycerol backbone in
triglycerides. Carbohydrate contains 15.8
kilojoules (3.75
kilocalories) and proteins 16.8 kilojoules (4
kilocalories) per
gram, while fats contain 37.8
kilojoules (9 kilocalories) per gram. In the case of protein, this
is somewhat misleading as only some amino acids are usable for
fuel. Likewise, in humans, only some carbohydrates are usable for
fuel, as in many
monosaccharides and
some
disaccharides. Other carbohydrate
types can be used, but only with the assistance of gut bacteria.
Ruminants and
termites can even process
cellulose, which is indigestible to other
organisms.
Based on the effects on risk of heart disease and obesity, the
Institute of Medicine
recommends that American and Canadian adults get between 40-65% of
dietary energy from carbohydrates.The
Food and Agriculture
Organization and
World
Health Organization jointly recommend that national dietary
guidelines set a goal of 55-75% of total energy from carbohydrates,
but only 10% directly from sugars (their term for simple
carbohydrates).
Classification
For dietary purposes, carbohydrates can be classified as simple
(
monosaccharides and
disaccharides) or complex (
oligosaccharides and
polysaccharides). The term
complex
carbohydrate was first used in the
U.S.
Senate
Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs publication
Dietary Goals for the United States (1977), where it
denoted "fruit, vegetables and whole-grains". Dietary guidelines
generally recommend that complex carbohydrates, and such
nutrient-rich simple carbohydrate sources such as
fruit (glucose or fructose) and
dairy products (lactose) make up the bulk of
carbohydrate consumption. This excludes such sources of simple
sugars as candy and sugary drinks.
The
USDA's
Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2005
dispensed with the simple/complex distinction, instead recommending
fiber-rich foods and whole grains.
The
glycemic index and
glycemic load concepts have been developed to
characterize food behavior during human digestion. They rank
carbohydrate-rich foods based on the rapidity of their effect on
blood glucose levels. The
insulin index is a similar, more recent
classification method that ranks foods based on their effects on
blood insulin levels, which are caused by
glucose (or starch) and some amino acids in food. Glycemic index is
a measure of how quickly food glucose is absorbed, while glycemic
load is a measure of the total absorbable glucose in foods.
Metabolism
Catabolism
Catabolism is the metabolic reaction cells undergo in order to
extract energy. There are two major
metabolic pathways of monosaccharide
catabolism:
glycolysis and the
citric acid cycle
In glycolysis, oligo/polysaccharides are cleaved first to smaller
monosaccharides by enzymes called
Glycoside hydrolases. The monosaccharide
units can then enter into monosaccharide catabolism. In some cases,
as with humans, not all carbohydrate types are usable as the
digestive and metabolic enzymes necessary are not present. For
instance, neither horses nor humans nor cats can digest and use
cellulose, but ruminants and termites can.
Carbohydrate chemistry
Carbohydrate chemistry is a
large and economically important branch of organic chemistry. Some
of the main
organic reactions that
involve carbohydrates are:
See also
Notes
- John Merle Coulter, Charler Reid Barnes, Henry Chandler Cowles
(1930), A Textbook of Botany for Colleges and
Universities"
- Carl A. Burtis, Edward R. Ashwood, Norbert W. Tietz (2000),
Tietz fundamentals of clinical
chemistry
- Matthews, C. E.; K. E. Van Holde; K. G. Ahern (1999)
Biochemistry. 3rd edition. Benjamin Cummings. ISBN
0-8053-3066-6
- N.A.Campbell (1996) Biology (4th edition). Benjamin
Cummings NY. p.23 ISBN 0-8053-1957-3
- Is dietary carbohydrate essential for human
nutrition? - Westman 75 (5): 951 - American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition
- A High-Protein, High-Fat, Carbohydrate-Free Diet
Reduces Energy Intake, Hepatic Lipogenesis, and Adiposity in Rats -
Pichon et al. 136 (5): 1256 - Journal of Nutrition
- Food and Nutrition Board (2002/2005). Dietary Reference Intakes for Energy, Carbohydrate, Fiber,
Fat, Fatty Acids, Cholesterol, Protein, and Amino Acids.
Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. Page
769. ISBN 0-309-08537-3
- Joint WHO/FAO expert consultation (2003). Diet, Nutrition and the Prevention of Chronic
Diseases (PDF). Geneva: World
Health Organization. Pages 55-56. ISBN 92-4-120916-X
- Joint WHO/FAO expert consultation (1998), Carbohydrates in
human nutrition, chapter 1. ISBN 92-5-104114-8.
- DHHS
and USDA, Dietary
Guidelines for Americans 2005, Chapter 7 Carbohydrates
References
- John Merle Coulter, Charler Reid Barnes, Henry Chandler Cowles
(1930), A Textbook of Botany for Colleges and
Universities"
- Carl A. Burtis, Edward R. Ashwood, Norbert W. Tietz (2000),
Tietz fundamentals of clinical
chemistry
- Matthews, C. E.; K. E. Van Holde; K. G. Ahern (1999)
Biochemistry. 3rd edition. Benjamin Cummings. ISBN
0-8053-3066-6
- N.A.Campbell (1996) Biology (4th edition). Benjamin
Cummings NY. p.23 ISBN 0-8053-1957-3
- Is dietary carbohydrate essential for human
nutrition? - Westman 75 (5): 951 - American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition
- A High-Protein, High-Fat, Carbohydrate-Free Diet
Reduces Energy Intake, Hepatic Lipogenesis, and Adiposity in Rats -
Pichon et al. 136 (5): 1256 - Journal of Nutrition
- Food and Nutrition Board (2002/2005). Dietary Reference Intakes for Energy, Carbohydrate, Fiber,
Fat, Fatty Acids, Cholesterol, Protein, and Amino Acids.
Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. Page
769. ISBN 0-309-08537-3
- Joint WHO/FAO expert consultation (2003). Diet, Nutrition and the Prevention of Chronic
Diseases (PDF). Geneva: World
Health Organization. Pages 55-56. ISBN 92-4-120916-X
- Joint WHO/FAO expert consultation (1998), Carbohydrates in
human nutrition, chapter 1. ISBN 92-5-104114-8.
- DHHS
and USDA, Dietary
Guidelines for Americans 2005, Chapter 7 Carbohydrates
External links