BIOL 1010 Lecture 2: Chapter 3 Molecules of Cells

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Monosaccharides (simple sugars: are the monomers of carbohydrates, generally, have molecular formulas that are some multiple of ch2o, glucose is the most important monosaccharides in chemistry of life, glucose are the main fuel molecules for cellular work. Carbon skeletons: glucose and fructose are six carbon atoms, other may have from 3 to 7 carbons, five carbon sugars are called pentose, six carbon sugars are called hexoses. It is when two monosaccharide monomers are bonded by a dehydration reaction: sucrose is the most disaccharide made of a glucose monomer linked to a fructose monomer. Polysaccharides: are macromolecules, polymers of hundreds to thousand of monosaccharides linked together by dehydration reactions, may function as storage molecules or as structural compounds. Starch: a storage polysaccharide in plants, consists of long chains of glucose monomers, molecules coil into a helical shape and may be unbranched or branched.

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