Of course it can be. Cellulose is made up of glucose
false this term is refered to as glucose
fck yu thats the answer btch
The structural formula of sucrose is C12H22O11. Sucrose's common name is table sugar, and is made up of two sugar units.
Carbohydrates
Sugar is made in the leaves of a plant by means of a process known as photosynthesis. Energy from sunlight drives the synthesis, in which water and carbon dioxide are combined to create a simple sugar. The catalyst for the reaction is the green pigment, chlorophyll.
false this term is refered to as glucose
fck yu thats the answer btch
cellulose is made from sugar, but isn't quite the same thing... SMART IS ME!
Compounds.
A plant's cell wall is made up mostly of 2 compounds, cellulose and hemicellulose. Cellulose and hemicellulose aid in the release of protoplasts.
By means of a catalyst called chlorophyll, plants are able to use the energy of sunlight to combine water and carbon dioxide (both of which compounds are readily available in the environment) into a simple sugar. With that sugar, other substances can then be made, using sugar as a source of energy as well as a building block for more complicated molecules such as cellulose, and using other substances absorbed from the soil.
complex carbohydrates are made of hundreds of sugar molecules. Carbohydrates are compounds made of sugar.
I think its cellulose
Carbohydrates.
The structural formula of sucrose is C12H22O11. Sucrose's common name is table sugar, and is made up of two sugar units.
It's called a cellulose cell wall. It gives the plant its shape and prevents the cell from bursting when water osmosis happened... The word 'cellulose' means sugar.
if it isn't branched then it is either cellulose or chitin. I figure because you are asking this under botany that you are looking at cellulose. polyssacharide; cellulose, starch are examples polyssacharides are made of monossacharides; glucose. Glucose (a pentose; six carbon sugar) joins with other glucose molecules by this oxygen bond formed through condensation with the loss of water.