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ketosen

Ketosen, or ketose in English, is a class of monosaccharides defined by a carbonyl group that is a ketone rather than an aldehyde. In most ketoses the carbonyl is located on carbon 2, though some derivatives have different positions. They share the general formula Cn(H2O)n and are usually soluble in water. Ketoses are one of the two main subtypes of simple sugars, the other being aldoses, which contain an aldehyde group at the terminal carbon.

The simplest ketose is dihydroxyacetone; the most common naturally occurring ketose is fructose, found in fruits

In metabolism, ketoses participate in pathways such as glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway, often after

Fructose is notable for its high relative sweetness and is a major dietary sugar, while other ketoses

and
honey
and
widely
used
as
a
sweetener.
Other
ketoses
include
ribulose
and
xylulose
(pentose
ketoses)
and
hexoses
such
as
sorbose,
psicose,
and
tagatose.
Ketoses
can
exist
in
linear
form
or
in
cyclic
forms,
typically
five-
or
six-membered
rings
called
furanose
and
pyranose.
isomerization
to
aldoses
or
through
phosphorylation
steps
that
generate
energy
or
biosynthetic
intermediates.
In
solution,
ketoses
can
isomerize
to
aldoses
under
certain
conditions
through
enediol
rearrangements,
a
process
known
as
the
Lobry
de
Bruyn–Alberda
van
Ekenstein
transformation.
serve
as
intermediates
in
carbohydrate
metabolism
or
as
starting
materials
in
biotechnological
syntheses.