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It has to be turned into a sugar, such as sucrose.
Hydrolysis of the glycosidic bond results. Sucrose is reduced to glucose and fructose.
sucrose
I think that the compound for sucrose is C12H22O11.
Sucrose is an organic chemical compound.
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No. DECREASING Cytoplasmic pH would decrease the rate of sucrose transport into the cell.
new molecules starts to form
It has to be turned into a sugar, such as sucrose.
It goes all funny and wired
Hydrolysis of the glycosidic bond results. Sucrose is reduced to glucose and fructose.
The sucrose does not react with Fehling's reagent. Sucrose is a disaccharide of glucose and fructose. Most disaccharides are reducing sugars, sucrose is a notable exception, for it is a non-reducing sugar. The anomeric carbon of glucose is involved in the glucose- fructose bond and hence is not free to form the aldehyde in solution.
The sugar molecules disperse themselves between the water-molecules, making it seem as though they disappear, 'hidden' by the water molecules. It is important to know if the dissolving water is hot, lukewarm or cold. This affects the rate at which the solute mixes with the solvent.
No, there is not sucrose in feces. This is because sucrose is only in food that is not digested.
Distilled water will move out of the dialysis bag and into the sucrose solution due to osmosis and the fact that the dialysis bag has a hypertonic solution of H2O as compared to the sucrose solution.
Sucrose has no odor.
Sucrose is not magnetic.