Mannoheptulose is a seven-carbon monosaccharide classified as a heptose and specifically a ketose sugar characterized by the presence of a ketone functional group at the second carbon (C-2). Structurally, it has the mannose configuration, giving it stereochemical similarity to mannose with a seven-carbon backbone rather than the common six-carbon framework of hexoses. Its molecular formula is C7H14O7 with a molecular weight of approximately 210.18 g/mol.
Chemically, D-mannoheptulose exists primarily in its open-chain form as a 2-keto sugar, but can cyclize into furanose and pyranose ring forms in solution. It is a white to off-white crystalline solid with a melting point around 148-150°C and density near 1.6 g/cm³. It exhibits moderate solubility in water and organic solvents such as DMSO and ethanol. The compound has an optical rotation of +29° (in water) consistent with its stereochemistry.
Biological Significance
Biologically, mannoheptulose is found notably in avocado as a major non-structural carbohydrate. It functions as a specific inhibitor of hexokinases and glucokinases, enzymes responsible for phosphorylation of glucose and other hexoses. This inhibition results in a blockade of glucose metabolism and insulin release in pancreatic beta cells, which has been studied in metabolic research contexts. Due to these properties, mannoheptulose is used experimentally to investigate carbohydrate metabolism and insulin regulation.
Biochemical Roles
From a biochemical perspective, mannoheptulose participates in metabolic pathways related to seven-carbon sugar metabolism and can serve as a metabolic intermediate or analog in specialized pathways involving heptoses.
In summary, mannoheptulose is a biologically significant ketoheptose with unique chemical properties and important metabolic modulatory effects, particularly as an enzymatic inhibitor of hexokinase/glucokinase. Its study is valuable in understanding carbohydrate metabolism and potential metabolic intervention strategies.

