Science, asked by jdmgcaling22, 2 months ago

how is it possible that a polysaccharide molecule such as glycogen may have one reducing ends and men or nonreducing ends

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Answered by animelover33
3

Answer:

Branches occur at every twelve to thirty residues along a chain of α (1→4) linked glucoses. As a result, amylopectin has one reducing end and many nonreducing ends. ... Glycogen is broken down at these nonreducing ends by the enzyme glycogen phosphorylase to release glucose for energy.

Explanation:

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