Monosaccharide
From Wikinfo
In biochemistry, monosaccharides are carbohydrates in the form of simple sugars.
Monosaccharides, like disaccharides, are sweet, water soluble and crystalline.
Monosaccharides are classified by the number of carbon molecules they contain (triose, tetrose, pentose, hexose and heptose) and by the active group, which is either an aldehyde or a ketone. These are then combined, e.g. aldohexoses, ketotrioses.
Further, each carbon atom that supports a hydroxyl group (except for the first and last) is optically active, allowing a number of different carbohydrates with the same basic structure. For instance, galactose is an aldohexose, but has different properties from glucose because the atoms are arranged differently.
Examples include:
- trioses: glyceraldehyde and dihydroxyacetone
- tetroses: Erythrose
- pentoses: lyxose, ribose and deoxyribose
- hexoses : idose, glucose, fructose, and galactose
- heptoses:
Structure
With a few notable exceptions (e.g. deoxyribose), they have the general formula:
- (CH2O)n
External links
- Additional work on this article is appreciated.
References
- Adapted from the Wikipedia article, "Monosaccharide" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monosaccharide, used under the GNU Free Documentation License

