glycogen, cellulose, starches, and chitin
There are several kinds of polysaccharides:
Cellulose
Chitin
starch
glycogen
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This is an example of hydrolosis; a decoposition using water, or H2O.
They are all polysaccharides made of glucose monomers.
starches, glycogen and cellulose
The process of dehydration synthesis bonds monosaccharides together to form disaccharides and polysaccharides.
glycogen and starch are the two polysaccharides used to store energy
Polysaccharides
carbohydrates, sugars
Glycogen, starch, Cellulose and chitin
glycogen, cellulose, starches, and chitinThere are several kinds of polysaccharides:Storage polysaccharides; for example, starch and glycogenStructural polysaccharides; for example, cellulose, chitin, and pectinAcidic polysaccharides that contain carboxyl, phosphate and/or sulfuric ester groupsBacterial capsular polysaccharides produced by pathogenic bacteria in the form of thick mucus
The subunits that make up polysaccharides are sugars, or monosaccharides. An example of a monosaccharide is glucose, which we need for energy.
inday waya ako kalo oy!
Structural polysaccharides are the polysaccharides that are found to form the structure of an organism. Eg. Cellulose - in plants Chitin - found in outer skeleton of insects and crabs Lignin - wood
No. Polysaccharides are carbohydrates.
Polysaccharides = one sugar, such as glucose Disaccharides = linked sugars--two glucose forming maltose. Polysaccharides = many linked sugars--starch is an example of this.
Polysaccharides are starches that are found in a variety of different foods. Grains contain polysaccharides . Polysaccharides are known to be high in carbohydrates.
The subunits of Polysaccharides are monosaccharides
monosaccharides are the monomers of polysaccharides