lactose
The combination of glucose and galactose forms lactose, which is a disaccharide commonly found in milk. Lactose is broken down by the enzyme lactase into its constituent monosaccharides during digestion.
Glucose and Galactose.
glucose, fructose, sucroseI believe glucose, galactose, and fructose are the three most common.
Lactose is composed of two monosaccharides: glucose and galactose.
Glucose, Fructose, and Galactose.
any form of sugar is changed into glucose, because the only hormone the body has to break down sugars is insulin and insulin can only break down glucose. fructose and galactose are unusable forms, think of it as a "some-assembly-required" product, fructose and galactose are the unassembled forms, glucose is the assembled.
The monosaccharides galactose and glucose, when bonded together through a condensation reaction, form the disaccharide lactose.
The 2 mono saccharides that make up lactose are glucose and galactose. Glucose is basically sugar in its most basic form. It is made by plants through photosynthesis.
Glucose, Fructose, and Galactose are all examples of monosaccharides.
The trisaccharide that can be converted by beta-galactosidase into maltose and galactose is raffinose. Raffinose is composed of galactose, glucose, and fructose. When beta-galactosidase acts on raffinose, it hydrolyzes the galactose unit, resulting in the formation of maltose (glucose and glucose) and galactose.
Glucose and Galactose make up lactose Glucose and fructose make up sucrose Glucose and glucose make maltose
Lactose is the disaccharide produced by combining glucose and galactose.