glucose
Glucose, a six-carbon molecule, is the starting molecule for glycolysis.
Glucose (C6H12O6) is a monosaccharide that contains twelve hydrogen atoms, six carbon atoms and six oxygen atoms. A glucose and fructose molecule combine to create a sucrose molecule.
An insulin molecule is much bigger than a glucose molecule.
when you break the bonds of the glucose molecule you get energy.
The principle storage molecule for glucose in plants is starch . The principle storage molecule for glucose in animal cells is glycogen.
Glucose is the molecule that enters glycolysis to be broken down into pyruvate.
A molecule of glucose (C6H12O6) contains 6 carbon atoms.
lactose
The glucose molecule is much larger than the water molecule.
There are 6 atoms of oxygen in a molecule of glucose (C6H12O6).
The number of glucose monomers in a starch molecule can vary, but on average, a starch molecule can contain hundreds to thousands of glucose monomers linked together in a linear or branched chain.