Science, asked by pritirajane311, 4 months ago

biological significance of carbohydrates​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Carbohydrates are important in cells as energy sources (glucose, glycogen, amylose), as markers of cellular identity (oligosaccharides on the surface of cells of multicellular organisms), as structural components (cellulose in plants), and as constituents of nucleotides (ribose in RNA, deoxyribose in DNA).

Answered by Hαrsh
9

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Explanation:

Carbohydrates are important in cells as energy sources (glucose, glycogen, amylose), as markers of cellular identity (oligosaccharides on the surface of cells of multicellular organisms), as structural components (cellulose in plants), and as constituents of nucleotides (ribose in RNA, deoxyribose in DNA).

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