QUESTION IMAGE
Question
the models show the structures of the carbohydrates cellulose, starch, and glycogen.
cellulose branched starch glycogen
compare the chemical structures of cellulose, starch, and glycogen.
table with columns: cellulose, starch, glycogen; rows: has a branched structure, is a polysaccharide, has (parallel) chains
Brief Explanations
- Branched Structure: Cellulose has a linear (unbranched) structure of glucose units linked by β - 1,4 glycosidic bonds. Starch (specifically amylopectin, a component of starch) and glycogen have branched structures (with α - 1,6 glycosidic bonds at branch points in addition to α - 1,4 bonds). For branched starch (as shown) and glycogen, they are branched, while cellulose is not.
- Polysaccharide: All three (cellulose, starch, glycogen) are polysaccharides, meaning they are polymers made up of many monosaccharide (glucose) units.
- Parallel Chains: Cellulose molecules form parallel chains that can hydrogen - bond with each other, giving it a rigid structure. Starch (even branched starch) and glycogen do not have this parallel chain arrangement; their structures are more branched or, in the case of amylose (a linear part of starch), just linear but not in parallel arrays like cellulose.
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| cellulose | starch | glycogen | |
|---|---|---|---|
| is a polysaccharide | √ | √ | √ |
| has (parallel) chains | √ | × | × |