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551902
Starch, glycogen and cellulose
Description
Biology (Cells and Movement in and out of them) Mind Map on Starch, glycogen and cellulose, created by Beth Ritchie on 15/02/2014.
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biology
cells and movement in and out of them
biology
cells and movement in and out of them
Mind Map by
Beth Ritchie
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
Beth Ritchie
almost 11 years ago
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Resource summary
Starch, glycogen and cellulose
Cellulose
Made from monomers of beta glucose
In Beta glucose, the OH group is above rather than below the ring
Therefore to form glycosidic bonds, each molecule must be rotated by 180 degrees
It therefore forms straight, unbranched chains
Chains run parallel to one another, allowing hydrogenn 'bonds' to form cross-linkages between adjacent chains
Sheer overall number of hydrogen bonds gives cellulose considerable strength
Cellulose are grouped togethwe to form microfibrils
Microfibrils are arranged in parallel groups called fibres
In cell walls it exerts an inward pressure to prevent cells bursting, and this stops more water entering the cell
Starch
Main role of starch is energy storage
Suited to function
Insoluable so doesnt draw water into the cells by osmosis
Insoluable so doesnt easily diffuse out of cells
Compact, so lots of it can be stored in a small place
When hydrolysed it forms alpha glucose which is easily transported and readily used in respiration
Never found in animal cells - glycogen is used
Found in many parts of a plant in the form of small grains
Large amounts occur in seeds and storage organs, such as potato tubers
Important food component and major energy source in most diets
Chains of alpha glucose monosaccharides linkied by glycosidic bonds
Unbranched chain is wound into a tight coil making the molecule compact
Glycogen
Similar structure to starch
Has shorter chains
More highly branched
Major carbohydrate storage product of animals
Stored as small granuals mainly in the muscles and the liver
Suited for storage in the same way starch is
As it is made up of smaller chains, it is even more readily hydrolysed
Found in animals, but never plants
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