monosakkaridene
Monosakkaridene are the simplest carbohydrates, consisting of a single sugar unit that cannot be hydrolyzed into smaller carbohydrate molecules. They have the empirical formula (CH2O)n, with n typically between 3 and 7. Common examples include glucose (an aldohexose), fructose (a ketohexose), galactose, ribose, and deoxyribose. They occur freely in nature and serve as essential energy sources and metabolic intermediates.
Monosakkaridene are classified by the position of the carbonyl group (aldose vs ketose) and by their stereochemistry
They form glycosidic bonds to yield disaccharides and polysaccharides; ribose and deoxyribose are components of RNA
Biosynthesis and metabolism: Plants fix CO2 into triose phosphates via photosynthesis; isomerases interconvert aldoses and ketoses;