Disaccharides: Difference between revisions
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A Diasaccharide, is a [[Carbohydrate|carbohydrate]] molecule, which consists of two units of [[Monosaccharide|monosaccharide]] molecules bound together by a [[Glycosidic bond|glycosidic bond]].<br> | |||
Some common examples of disaccharides are: | |||
*[[Sucrose]] (made up of the monosaccarides [[Glucose|glucose]] and [[Fructose|fructose]]) | |||
*[[Lactose]] (made up of the monosaccarides [[Galactose|galactose]] and [[Glucose|glucose]]) | |||
*[[Maltose]] (made up of 2 glucose monosaccarides) | |||
In lactose and maltose, an alpha [[1,4 glycosidic bond|1,4-glycosidic bond]] is formed between the two monosaccharides, resulting from the linkage of the alpha-anomeric form of C-1 on one sugar and the [[Hydroxyl|hydroxyl]] oxygen on the C-4 of the other sugar<ref>Berg J., Tymoczko J and Stryer L. (2012) Biochemistry, 7th edition, New York: W.H. Freeman. pg 337</ref>.<br> | |||
=== References === | |||
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Latest revision as of 11:30, 5 December 2017
A Diasaccharide, is a carbohydrate molecule, which consists of two units of monosaccharide molecules bound together by a glycosidic bond.
Some common examples of disaccharides are:
- Lactose (made up of the monosaccarides galactose and glucose)
- Maltose (made up of 2 glucose monosaccarides)
In lactose and maltose, an alpha 1,4-glycosidic bond is formed between the two monosaccharides, resulting from the linkage of the alpha-anomeric form of C-1 on one sugar and the hydroxyl oxygen on the C-4 of the other sugar[1].
References
- ↑ Berg J., Tymoczko J and Stryer L. (2012) Biochemistry, 7th edition, New York: W.H. Freeman. pg 337