Monosaccharides: Difference between revisions

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A monosaccharide is the simpliset form of sugar such as [[Glucose|glucose]]. Many monosaccharides may for&nbsp;[[Disaccharides|disaccharides]]&nbsp;and polysaccharides&nbsp;by condensation reactions&nbsp;<ref name="monosaccharide">Alberts, Johnson, Lewis, Raff, Roberts, Walter, (2008), Molecular biology of a cell, 5th edition, New York, Garland Science.</ref>.  
A monosaccharide is the simpliset form of sugar such as [[Glucose|glucose]]. Many monosaccharides may for&nbsp;[[Disaccharides|disaccharides]]&nbsp;and [[Polysaccharides|polysaccharides]]&nbsp;by [[Condensation_Reaction|condensation reactions]]&nbsp;<ref name="monosaccharide">Alberts, Johnson, Lewis, Raff, Roberts, Walter, (2008), Molecular biology of a cell, 5th edition, New York, Garland Science.</ref>.  


=== References  ===
=== References  ===


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Revision as of 09:04, 10 January 2011

A monosaccharide is the simpliset form of sugar such as glucose. Many monosaccharides may for disaccharides and polysaccharides by condensation reactions [1].

References

  1. Alberts, Johnson, Lewis, Raff, Roberts, Walter, (2008), Molecular biology of a cell, 5th edition, New York, Garland Science.

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