Tetrasaccharide

      Chemical structure of stachyose

      A tetrasaccharide is a carbohydrate which gives upon hydrolysis four molecules of the same or different monosaccharides. For example, stachyose upon hydrolysis gives one molecule each of glucose and fructose and two molecules of galactose. The general formula of a tetrasaccharide is typically C24H42O21.

      Structure and occurrence of trisaccharides
      Name chemical compound function/occur
      Lychnose (1-α-Galactosyl-raffinose) O-α-D-Galp-(1→6)-O-α-D-Glup-(1→2)-O-β-D-Fruf-(1→1)-O-α-D-Galp
      Maltotetraose O-α-D-Glcp-(1→4)-O-α-D-Glcp-(1→4)-O-α-D-Glcp-(1→4)-D-Glcp in Starchsyrup
      Nigerotetraose O-α-D-Glcp-(1→3)-O-α-D-Glcp-(1→3)-O-α-D-Glcp-(1→3)-D-Glcp
      Nystose (β-D-Fructosyl-1-kestose) O-α-D-Glcp-(1→2)-β-D-Fruf-(1→2)-β-D-Fruf-(1→2)-β-D-Fruf
      Sesamose O-α-D-Galp-(1→6)-O-α-D-Galp-(1→6)-O-β-D-Fruf-(2→1)-O-α-D-Glcp
      Stachyose O-α-D-Galp-(1→6)-O-α-D-Galp-(1→6)-O-α-D-Glcp-(1→2)-β-D-Fruf widespread in plants (artichoke, soybean)

      References

      ↑Jump back a section

      Read in another language

      Last modified on 15 May 2013, at 19:28