Cellulose.
A polysaccaride.
No
a carbohydrate composed of mainly monosaccharide units- answer by Matt. Walton
Starch, glycogen and cellulose are three important polysaccarides.
Herapin is a polysaccaride. Polysaccharides have a general formula of Cn(H2O)n-1 where n is number between 200 and 2500
The energy in a polysaccharide is stored in the chemical bonds between the sugar molecules. When these bonds are broken through digestion or metabolism, energy is released for the body to use.
It can be a Monosaccahride (1 sugar ring), Disaccahride (2 sugar rings), or Polysaccaride (3 or more sugar rings). It could be more specific but I would need to know more about the sugar.
cell wall Cell walls are found in plants and not in animal cells; however, fungi also have cell walls and they are not plants or animals.
um.....a potato isn't any of those. A saccharide is a sugar, and a monosaccharide is one sugar that is not bonded, such as galactose, glucose, or fructose (which are the three main monosaccharides, and are isomeric). A disaccharide is two monosaccharides bonded together, usually using dehydration synthesis. An example would be maltose, which is C12H24O12, or two glucose molecules. A polysaccaride is a lot of monosaccharides bonded together such as starch. So a potato is none of those.
All disaccharides break into 2 monosaccharides. 'Mono' meaning one and 'Di' meaning two. Anything with more than two combined monosaccharides would be a polysaccaride.
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.
There is no antonym for example, you can't have no example. Therefore there is no antonym for example.