A monosaccharide is the building block of carbohydrates. Some examples of monosaccharides are glucose, sucrose, and galactose. Chains of monosaccharides together form disaccharides and polysaccharides.
A disaccharide or polysaccharide.
monosaccharide
Both are disacharides and cannot be metabolized without the use of an enzyme to break them down to a monosacharide for the bacteria to digets. Some bacteria can digest lactose, as an example, Lactobacilli.
im trying to figure that same thing out ): Well try no longer. The answer is a monosacharide called glucose C6H12O6
Sucrose is C12H22O11. C6H12O6 could refer to: * Hexoses ** Allose ** Altrose ** Fructose ** Galactose ** Glucose ** L-Glucose ** Gulose ** Idose ** Mannose ** Psicose ** Sorbose ** Tagatose ** Talose * Inositol * D-chiro-inositol
alpha glucose molecules
A disaccharide or polysaccharide.
Maltose is a dissacharide formed from two molocules of glucose.
monosaccharide
No. Fructose is a simple sugar or monosacharide, and has no iron in it whatsoever.
Glucose is a simple sugar or monosacharide. It may be presented as a white powerder or solid, or in solution with sterile water.
glucose, galactose, fructose, ribose (found in RNA), deoxyribose (found in DNA), glyceraldehyde & dihydroxyacetone (the simplest monosaccharides)
Yes. It's an organic compound with formula C 5 H 10 O 5-specifically, a pentose monosaccharide (simple sugar).
im trying to figure that same thing out ): Well try no longer. The answer is a monosacharide called glucose C6H12O6
There are 17 grams of carbohydrates in 1 Tablespoon of honey.
A monosacharide is a "simple" sugar such as glucose or fructose. A polysaccharide is a polymer made by linking many monosacharides together. For example, glycogen is a polysaccharide; it is a polymer of glucose.
Both are disacharides and cannot be metabolized without the use of an enzyme to break them down to a monosacharide for the bacteria to digets. Some bacteria can digest lactose, as an example, Lactobacilli.