Carbohydrates
Disaccharide
A molecule composed of two monosaccharides joined by a glycosidic linkage. Common examples include maltose, sucrose, and lactose.
Carbohydrates
Are sugars (saccharide) monomer- monosaccharide Polymer - polysaccharide
glucose
Monosaccharide; hexose; blood sugar Functions as an immediate source of energy
fructose
Monosaccharide; hexose; found in fruit Functions as an immediate source of energy
galactose
Monosaccharide; hexose; found in milk Functions as an immediate source of energy
deoxyribose
Monosaccharide; pentose Forms part of the backbone of DNA
ribose
Monosaccharide; pentose Forms part of the backbone of RNA
polysaccharide
Polymers of a few hundred to a few thousand monosaccharides joined by glycosidic linkages used for storage and structure Examples: starch, glycogen, cellulose
chitin
Polysaccharide Mononer: glucose sttructuural: exoskeleton in some animals
glycogen
Polysaccharide; Monomer: glucose ready storage of energy in animals
starch
Polysaccharide; Monomer: glucose ready storage of energy in plants
Cellulose
Polysaccharide; Monomer:glucose function as structure in plants
Function of carbohydrates
Quick Fuel and short term energy storage Structural Support Cell-to-Cell Recognition
Monosaccharide
a simple sugar that is the basic subunit, or monomer, of a carbohydrate Examples: glucose, fructose, galactose
lactose
disaccharide; Monomers: galactose, glucose Functions as an immediate source of energy
sucrose
disaccharide; Monomers:glucose, fructose Functions as an immediate source of energy
pent-
five
tetr-
four
hex-
six
-ose
sugar
tri-
three