A.
This layer of carbohydrate helps protect the cell surface from mechanical damage. And because the oligosaccharides and polysaccharides attract water molecules, they also give the cell a slimy surface, which helps motile cells such as white blood cells squeeze through narrow spaces and prevents blood cells from sticking to one another or to the walls of blood vessels.
B.
They have an important role in cell–cell recognition and adhesion. Transmembrane proteins called lectins are specialized to bind to particular oligosaccharide side chains. The oligosaccharide side chains of glycoproteins and glycolipids, although short (typically fewer than 15 sugar units), are enormously diverse. Unlike proteins, in which the amino acids are all joined together in a linear chain by identical peptide bonds, sugars can be joined together in many different arrangements, often forming elaborate branched structures. Using a variety of covalent linkages, even three different sugars can form hundreds of different trisaccharides.
C.
The carbohydrate layer on the surface of cells in a multicellular organism serves as a kind of distinctive clothing, like a police officer’s uniform. It is characteristic of each cell type and is recognized by other cell types that interact with it. Specific oligosaccharides in the carbohydrate layer are involved, for example, in the recognition of an egg by sperm.
D.
Similarly, in the early stages of a bacterial infection, carbohydrates on the surface of white blood cells called neutrophils are recognized by a lectin on the cells lining the blood vessels at the site of infection; this recognition causes the neutrophils to adhere to the blood vessel wall and then migrate from the bloodstream into the infected tissue, where they help destroy the invading bacteria.