How do polysaccharides differ structurally and functionally from simple carbohydrates?
1 Answer
May 8, 2018
polysaccharides are used mainly as to store energy whereas monosaccharides are used to be used for respiration
Explanation:
polysaccharides (glycogen, starch and cellulose) are polymer of monosaccharides.
Glycogen is the storage molecule in animals. They have 1-4 glycosidic bond as well as the 1-6 glycosidic bond. It is insoluble so it is not affected by the water potential.
starch is the storage molecule in animals. They are actually made up of 2 compounds: amylose and amylopectin. Amylose has 1-4 glycosidic bond so it will spiral and amylopectin was more 1-6 glycosidic bonds meaning more glucose can be joined to form compact molecule.
Cellulose is more of a structural carbohydrates as they help strength the cell wall of a plant
Hope this helps x