diglycosides
Diglycosides are glycosides in which two monosaccharide units are bound to a non-sugar aglycone (the glycone). The two sugars can be arranged as a single disaccharide moiety attached to the aglycone, or as two separate glycosylations at different hydroxyl groups on the aglycone. The sugars most often encountered are common hexoses and pentoses such as glucose, galactose, rhamnose, xylose, and arabinose, and the glycosidic bonds are typically O-glycosidic, with alpha or beta configurations.
Occurrence and function: Diglycosides occur widely in the plant kingdom and in some microorganisms. They commonly
Biogenesis and metabolism: Glycosyltransferases catalyze the attachment of sugar donors (for example UDP-glucose, UDP-xylose) to specific
Detection and applications: In natural products chemistry, diglycosides are characterized by chromatographic and spectroscopic methods; hydrolysis