Polysaccharides (sometimes called glycans) are relatively complex carbohydrates.
They are polymers made up of many monosaccharides joined together by glycosidic linkages. They are therefore very large, often branched, molecules. They tend to be amorphous, insoluble in water, and have no sweet taste.
When all the constituent monosaccharides are of the same type they are termed homopolysaccharides; when more than one type of monosaccharide is present they are termed heteropolysaccharides.
Examples include storage polysaccharides such as starch and glycogen and structural polysaccharides such as cellulose and chitin.
Polysaccharides have a general formula of Cn(H2O)n-1 where n is usually a large number between 200 and 2500.
Starches
Starches are glucose polymers in which
glucopyranose units are bonded by
alpha-linkages.
Amylose consists of a linear chain of several hundred glucose molecules.
Amylopectin is a branched molecule made of several thousand glucose units.
Starches are
insoluble in
water. They can be digested by hydrolysis catalyzed by enzymes called
amylases, which can break the
alpha-linkages. Humans and other animals have amylases, so they can digest starches.
Potato,
rice,
wheat, and
maize are major sources of starch in the human diet.
Glycogen
Glycogen is the storage form of glucose in
animals. It is a branched
polymer of glucose. Glycogen can be broken down to form substrates for respiration, through the process of
glycogenolysis. This involves the breaking of most of the C-O-C bonds between the glucose molecules by the addition of a phosphate, rather than a water as in
hydrolysis. This process yields phosphorylated glucose molecules, which can be metabolized with a saving of one
ATP molecule.
Cellulose
The structural components of
plants are formed primarily from
cellulose. Wood is largely cellulose and
lignin, while
paper and
cotton are nearly pure cellulose. Cellulose is a
polymer made with repeated glucose units bonded together by
beta-linkages. Humans and many other animals lack an enzyme to break the
beta-linkages, so they do not digest cellulose. Certain animals can digest cellulose, because bacteria possessing the enzyme are present in their gut. The classic example is the
termite.
Acidic polysaccharides
Acidic polysaccharides are polysaccharides that contain
carboxyl groups, phosphate groups and/or
sulfuric ester groups.
Bacterial Capsule Polysaccharides
Pathogenic bacteria commonly produce a thick, mucous-like, layer of polysaccharide. This "capsule" cloaks antigenic proteins on the bacterial surface that would otherwise provoke an immune response and thereby lead to the destruction of the bacteria. Capsular polysaccharides are water soluble, commonly acidic, and have
molecular weights on the order of 100-1000
kDa. They are linear and consist of regularly repeating subunits of one ~ six monosaccharides. There is enormous structural diversity; nearly two hundred different polysaccharides are produced by
E. coli alone. Mixtures of capsular polysaccharides, either
conjugated or native are used as vaccines.
Bacteria and many other microbes, including fungi and algae, often secrete polysaccharides as an evolutionary adaptation to help them adhere to surfaces and to prevent them from drying out. Humans have developed some of these polysaccharides into useful products, including xanthan gum, dextran, gellan gum, and pullulan.
Organic polymers | Polysaccharides
Полісахарыды | Polysaccharide | Polisacárido | Polisakarido | Polysaccharide | Polisakarido | Polisaccaridi | רב סוכר | Polysacharide | 多糖 | Sakkarid | Polisacharyd | Polissacarídeos | Polysacharid | Polisakarida | Polysakkaridi | Polysackarider | Полісахариди | 多糖