Polysaccharides

From Proteopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 6: Line 6:
=== Branched chain, α(1→4) glycosidic bonds ===
=== Branched chain, α(1→4) glycosidic bonds ===
-
<scene name='Polysaccharides/Amylopectin1/2'>Amylopectin</scene> is also a large glucose polymer that has α(1→4) glycosidic bonds connecting the glucose units. Rotate <scene name='Polysaccharides/Amylopectin2/1'>Amylopectin</scene> to view the glucopyranosyl units on edge to see that the bonds are α linkages. but its structure is more complex because it also contains α(1→ 6) glycosidic bonds. The structure shown here has only one such bond (yellow halo on carbon #6), in order to keep the structure relatively simple. The green ring is the reducing end of the molecule. The chain that proceeds from the branching point is colored blue. The yellow rings are the non-reducing ends of the two branches. They just happen to be close to each other in this model. The structure is more open (helix is not wound as tight) than the amylose because more space is needed for the chain that is formed at the branching point. The native amylopectin having many more branching points would be more open than this structure, in fact it would have very little curvature. Rotating & zooming amylopectin gives a focused view of the α(1→ 6) bond. <scene name='Polysaccharides/20_5_10/1'>TextToBeDisplayed</scene>
+
<scene name='Polysaccharides/Amylopectin1/2'>Amylopectin</scene> is also a large glucose polymer that has α(1→4) glycosidic bonds connecting the glucose units. Rotate <scene name='Polysaccharides/Amylopectin2/1'>Amylopectin</scene> to view the glucopyranosyl units on edge to see that the bonds are α linkages. but its structure is more complex because it also contains α(1→ 6) glycosidic bonds. <scene name='Polysaccharides/9_5_amylopectin2/1'>Glucose unit four</scene>, branching point, colored yellow. The green ring is the reducing end of the molecule. The chain that proceeds from the branching point is colored blue. The yellow rings are the non-reducing ends of the two branches. They just happen to be close to each other in this model. The structure is more open (helix is not wound as tight) than the amylose because more space is needed for the chain that is formed at the branching point. The native amylopectin having many more branching points would be more open than this structure, in fact it would have very little curvature. Rotating & zooming amylopectin gives a focused view of the α(1→ 6) bond. <scene name='Polysaccharides/20_5_10/1'>TextToBeDisplayed</scene>
</StructureSection>
</StructureSection>

Revision as of 16:16, 26 January 2012

The objective of this article is to illustrate and visualize the structures and concepts of common polysaccharides[1] that are difficult to visualize and illustrate by viewing two dimensional structures in textbooks. Structures with a 3D perspective are used to illustrate features of a molecule which can not be easily visualized using 2D structures.

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate


Insert caption here

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate


Terms Defined in Wikipedia


Other Carbohydrate Pages

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Karl Oberholser, Karsten Theis

Personal tools