Glucose is also called detxtose.
pentose phosphate pathway (also called phosphogluconate pathway, or hexose monophosphate shunt [HMP shunt])
No, fructose is a hexose sugar, it is made up of 6 carbons.
The primary difference between a pentose and a hexose is the obvious difference in the carbon content of each. A hexose, by definition, contains five carbons in its central ring, a hexose contains six. Examples of a hexose is the energy molecule glucose while an example of a pentose is ribose, a structural sugar that helps make up DNA.
When two hexoses, such as glucose and fructose, combine, the reaction is a condensation, because a small molecule is eliminated:glucose + fructose → sucrose + waterMore specifically, when the small eliminated molecule is water, it is a dehydration reaction.(The water is formed when a hydroxyl group -OH of one hexose reacts with a hydroxyl group on the other. Water is formed, and the two hexoses are combined by the remaining oxygen atom -O- )If further sugars add to the chain, the reaction is also polymerization.
C2H12O6 is a carbohydrate, specifically a hexose sugar called glucose.
pentose phosphate pathway (also called phosphogluconate pathway, or hexose monophosphate shunt [HMP shunt])
Hexose sugar are monosaccharides containing six carbon back bone in it.
A six-carbon sugar is called a hexose. Some examples of hexoses include glucose, fructose, and galactose.
hexose
Dextrose is another name for the hexose sugar glucose. It is commonly found in nature as a major energy source for living organisms and is often used in the food industry as a sweetener and energy source.
The most common hexose sugar in living organisms is glucose.
Pentose is a monosaccharide with five carbon atoms
hexose
The general answer is "hexose".
cytosol
Photosynthesis produce hexose sugar and oxygen
The term Hexose is used in Organic Chemistry. Its definition is any of the class of simple sugars who's molecules contain 6 Carbon atoms. Such as glucose, or fructose.