Respuesta :
Answer:
A glycosidic linkage connects the carbon 1 in glucose and carbon 2 in fructose.
Also OH is removed from carbon 2 of fructose and carbon 1 of glucose to release water
Explanation:
Disaccharides such as Sucrose are formed by the combination of two or more monosaccharide.
A sucrose is formed when glucose (C6H12O6) combines with another monomer named fructose (C6H12O6) though a dehydration process where water is released and a glycosidic bond (-- O--) is formed
Both these monosaccharides have numbering on their carbon atoms starting from the terminal carbon closest to the carbonyl group. A glycosidic linkage connects the carbon 1 in glucose and carbon 2 in fructose.
Also OH is removed from carbon 2 of fructose and carbon 1 of glucose to release water
The first carbon of glucose is bonded with the second carbon of fructose through dehydration synthesis
Sucrose is a disaccharide composed of glucose and fructose. This means the two saccharides need to form a link to create sucrose. This link is characterized by:
- A bond between the first carbon of glucose and the second carbon of fructose
- Dehydration synthesis: this means one molecule of water is released as glucose releases an OH molecule and fructose releases an H atom when the reaction occurs
This means an H2O molecule is released and the oxygen remaining acts as a bridge between glucose and fructose.
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