Glucose (Glc), a
monosaccharide (or simple
sugar) also known as
grape sugar,
blood sugar, or
corn sugar, is a
very important
carbohydrate in
biology. The living
cell uses it as a source of energy and
metabolic intermediate. Glucose is one of the main products of
photosynthesis and starts
cellular respiration in both
prokaryotes (
bacteria and
archaea) and
eukaryotes (
animals,
plants,
fungi, and
protists).
The name "glucose" comes from the
Greek word
glukus ( ), meaning
"sweet", and the suffix "-ose," which denotes a sugar.
Two
stereoisomer of the
aldohexose sugars are known as glucose, only one
of which (
D-glucose) is biologically active. This
form (
D-glucose) is often referred to as
dextrose monohydrate, or, especially in the
food industry, simply
dextrose (from
dextrorotatory glucose). This article
deals with the
D-form of glucose. The mirror-image
of the molecule,
L-glucose,
cannot be metabolized by cells in the biochemical process known as
glycolysis.
Structure
Glucose (C
6H
12O
6) contains six
carbon atoms, one of
which is part of an
aldehyde group.
Therefore glucose is an
aldohexose. In
solution, the glucose molecule can exist in an open-chain (acyclic)
form and a ring (cyclic) form (in equilibrium). The cyclic form is
the result of a covalent bond between the aldehyde C atom and the
C-5
hydroxyl group to form a six-membered
cyclic
hemiacetal. At
pH 7 the cyclic form is predominant. In the solid
phase, glucose assumes the cyclic form. Because the ring contains
five carbon atoms and one oxygen atom (like
pyran), the cyclic form of glucose is also referred to
as glucopyranose. In this ring, each carbon is linked to a
hydroxyl side group with the exception of the fifth
atom, which links to a sixth carbon atom outside the ring, forming
a CH
2OH group. Glucose is commonly available in the form
of a white powder or as a solid crystal. It can also be dissolved
in water as an
aqueous solution. Its
solubility level is very high.
Isomers
Aldohexose sugars have four
chiral centers, giving 2
4 =
16
stereoisomers. These are split into
two groups,
L and
D, with eight
sugars in each. Glucose is one of these sugars, and
L-glucose and
D-glucose are two of
the stereoisomers. Only seven of these are found in living
organisms, of which
D-glucose (Glu),
D-
galactose (Gal) and
D-
mannose (Man) are the most
important. These eight isomers (including glucose itself) are
related as
diastereoisomers and
belong to the
D
series.
An additional asymmetric center at C-1 (called
the anomeric
carbon atom) is created when glucose cyclizes and two ring
structures called
anomers are formed as
α-glucose and β-glucose. These anomers differ structurally by the
relative positioning of the hydroxyl group linked to C-1 and the
group at C-6, which is termed the reference carbon. When
D-glucose is drawn as a
Haworth projection or in the standard
chain conformation, the designation α means that the hydroxyl group
attached to C-1 is positioned trans to the -CH
2OH group
at C-5, while β means that it is cis. An inaccurate but
superficially attractive alternative method of distinguishing α
from β is observing whether the C-1 hydroxyl is below or above the
plane of the ring; this may fail if the glucose ring is drawn
upside down or in an alternative chair conformation. The α and β
forms interconvert over a timescale of hours in aqueous solution,
to a final stable ratio of α:β 36:64, in a process called
mutarotation. The ratio would be α:β 11:89 if
it were not for the influence of the
anomeric effect.
Image:D-glucose-chain-2D-Fischer.png|
The Fischer projection of
the chain form of D-glucose
Image:Glucose chain structure numbered.svg|
The chain form of D-glucose
Image:Alpha-D-glucopyranose-2D-skeletal.png|
α-D-
glucopyranose
Image:Beta-D-glucopyranose-2D-skeletal.png|
β-D-
glucopyranose
Image:D-glucose-chain-3D-balls.png|
Chain form: ball-and-stick
model
Image:D-glucose-chain-3D-vdW.png|
Chain form: space-filling
model
File:Alpha-D-glucose-from-xtal-1979-3D-balls.png|
α-D-
glucopyranose
File:Beta-D-glucose-from-xtal-3D-balls.png|
β-D-
glucopyranose
Rotamers
Within the cyclic form of glucose, rotation may occur around the
O6-C6-C5-O5 torsion angle, termed the
ω-angle, to form
three rotamer conformations as shown in the diagram below. In
referring to the orientations of the
ω-angle and the
O6-C6-C5-C4 angle, the three stable staggered rotamer conformations
are termed
gauche-
gauche (gg),
gauche-
trans (gt) and
trans-
gauche (tg). For methyl
α-
D-glucopyranose at equilibrium the ratio of
molecules in each rotamer conformation is reported as 57:38:5
gg:gt:tg.This tendency for the
ω-angle to prefer to adopt
a
gauche conformation is attributed to the
gauche effect.

Rotamer conformations of
α-
D-glucopyranose
Production
Natural
- Glucose is one of the products of photosynthesis in plants and some prokaryotes.
- In animals and fungi, glucose is the result of the breakdown of
glycogen, a process known as glycogenolysis. In plants the breakdown
substrate is starch.
- In animals, glucose is synthesized in the liver and kidneys from
non-carbohydrate intermediates, such as pyruvate and glycerol, by a
process known as gluconeogenesis.
- In some deep-sea bacteria glucose is
produced by chemosynthesis.
Commercial
Glucose is produced commercially via the
enzymatic hydrolysis of starch. Many
crops can be used as the source of starch.
Maize,
rice,
wheat,
cassava,
corn husk and
sago are all
used in various parts of the world.
In the United States
, cornstarch (from maize)
is used almost exclusively.
image:Glucose 1.jpg|Glucoseimage:Glucose 2.jpg|Glucose
tablets
Function
[[File:Glucose metabolism.svg|thumb|250px|Glucose metabolism and
various forms of it in the process.
-Glucose-containing compounds and
isomeric
forms are digested and taken up by the body in the intestines,
including
starch,
glycogen,
disaccharides and
monosaccharides.
-Glucose is stored in mainly the liver and muscles as
glycogen.
-It is distributed and utilized in tissues as free glucose.
]]
Scientists can speculate on the reasons why glucose, and not
another monosaccharide such as
fructose
(Fru), is so widely used in organisms. One reason might be that
glucose has a lower tendency, as compared to other hexose sugars,
to non-specifically react with the
amino
groups of
proteins. This reaction (
glycation) reduces or destroys the function of
many
enzymes. The low rate of glycation is
due to glucose's preference for the less reactive cyclic
isomer. Nevertheless, many of the long-term
complications of
diabetes (e.g.,
blindness,
renal
failure, and
peripheral
neuropathy) are probably due to the glycation of proteins or
lipids. In contrast,
enzyme-regulated
addition of glucose to proteins by
glycosylation is often essential to their
function.
As an energy source
Glucose is a ubiquitous fuel in
biology. It
is used as an energy source in most organisms, from bacteria to
humans. Use of glucose may be by either
aerobic respiration,
anaerobic respiration, or
fermentation. Carbohydrates are
the human body's key source of energy, through aerobic respiration,
providing approximately 3.75
kilocalories (16
kilojoules) of
food
energy per
gram. Breakdown of carbohydrates
(e.g. starch) yields
mono- and
disaccharides, most of which is
glucose. Through
glycolysis and later in
the reactions of the
citric acid
cycle (TCAC), glucose is
oxidized to
eventually form
CO2 and
water, yielding energy sources, mostly in the
form of
ATP. The insulin
reaction, and other mechanisms, regulate the concentration of
glucose in the blood. A high fasting blood sugar level is an
indication of prediabetic and diabetic conditions.
Glucose is a primary source of energy for the brain, and hence its
availability influences psychological processes. When
glucose is low, psychological processes
requiring mental effort (e.g.,
self-control, effortful decision-making) are
impaired.
Glucose in glycolysis
Use of glucose as an energy source in cells is via aerobic or
anaerobic respiration. Both of these start with the early steps of
the
glycolysis metabolic pathway. The first step of this
is the
phosphorylation of glucose by
hexokinase to prepare it for later
breakdown to provide energy.
The major reason for the immediate phosphorylation of glucose by a
hexokinase is to prevent diffusion out of
the cell. The phosphorylation adds a charged
phosphate group so the
glucose 6-phosphate cannot easily cross
the
cell membrane. Irreversible first
steps of a metabolic pathway are common for regulatory
purposes.
As a precursor
Glucose is critical in the production of
proteins and in
lipid
metabolism. In plants and most animals, it is also a
precursor for
vitamin C (
ascorbic
acid) production. It is modified for use in these processes by
the glycolysis pathway.
Glucose is used as a precursor for the synthesis of several
important substances. Starch,
cellulose,
and
glycogen ("animal starch") are common
glucose
polymers (
polysaccharides).
Lactose, the predominant sugar in milk, is a
glucose-galactose disaccharide. In
sucrose,
another important
disaccharide, glucose
is joined to fructose. These synthesis processes also rely on the
phosphorylation of glucose through the first step of
glycolysis.
Industrial use
In the industry glucose is used as a precursor to make vitamin C in
the
Reichstein process, to make
citric acid,
gluconic acid, bio-
ethanol,
polylactic
acid,
sorbitol.
Sources and absorption
Most dietary carbohydrates contain glucose, either as their only
building block, as in starch and
glycogen,
or together with another monosaccharide, as in sucrose and lactose.
Crystalline fructose, for
example, does not contain glucose and is about ninety-eight percent
fructose. In the lumen of the duodenum and small intestine, the
glucose oligo- and polysaccharides are broken down to
monosaccharides by the pancreatic and intestinal glycosidases.
Other polysaccarhides cannot be processed by the human intestine
and require assistance by intestinal flora if they are to be broken
down; the most notable exceptions are
sucrose (
fructose-glucose)
and
lactose (
galactose-glucose). Glucose is then transported
across the apical membrane of the
enterocytes by
SLC5A1, and
later across their basal membrane by
SLC2A2.
Some of the glucose is directly utilized as an energy source by
brain cells, intestinal cells and
red blood cells, while the rest reaches
the
liver,
adipose
tissue and
muscle cells, where it is
absorbed and stored as glycogen (under the influence of
insulin). Liver cell glycogen can be converted to
glucose and returned to the blood when insulin is low or absent;
muscle cell glycogen is not returned to the blood because of a lack
of enzymes. In fat cells, glucose is used to power reactions that
synthesize some
fat types and have other
purposes. Glycogen is the body's 'glucose energy storage' mechanism
because it is much more 'space efficient' and less reactive than
glucose itself.
History
Because glucose is a basic necessity of many organisms, a correct
understanding of its chemical makeup and structure contributed
greatly to a general advancement in organic chemistry. This
understanding occurred largely as a result of the investigations of
Emil Fischer, a German chemist who
received the 1902
Nobel Prize in
Chemistry as a result of his findings. The
synthesis of glucose established the structure of organic material
and consequently formed the first definitive validation of
Jacobus Henricus van't Hoff's
theories of chemical kinetics and the arrangements of chemical
bonds in carbon-bearing molecules. Between 1891 and 1894, Fischer
established the stereochemical configuration of all the known
sugars and correctly predicted the possible
isomers, applying van't Hoff's theory of asymmetrical
carbon atoms.
See also
References
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External links