Sucrose (table sugar)
glucose
When joining individual glucose monomers together to form a polysaccharide like starch or glycogen, a water molecule is removed in a condensation reaction to form a glycosidic bond.
Glycogen molecules can be synthesised by joining glucose units together.
An example of dehydration synthesis would be two monosaccharide's joining together. For example, glucose and fructose. Another word for synthesis is combination.
Joining You was created in 1998.
When you link two glucose molecules together you are going through dehydration synthesis which is getting rid of the water in the molecules and by doing that you have water, H2O, as the by-product.
Dehydration synthesis is a chemical reaction in which a water molecule is removed to bond two molecules together. In the case of joining four glucose molecules to form a polysaccharide, a water molecule is removed from each glucose molecule to form glycosidic bonds between them, resulting in the release of four water molecules.
Glucose comes from the dark reaction of photosynthesis. It is formed by the joining of two PGAL molecules.
Three molecules of water are released when the four glucose molecules are joined.
fastening together
They um consisted that donosaccharides is about the polysaccharide of glucose the monomers to plant-cell wall to be reinfroces too.
Joining two items with a substance (glue ) that bonds them together.