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substrate?
monosaccharide + monosaccharide yields disaccharide + water

a. monosaccharide and monosaccharide
b.disaccharide and water
c. monosaccharide and water
d. monosaccharide and disaccharide

2006-12-25 04:23:35 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Chemistry

2 answers

Answer is a

a. monosaccharide and monosaccharide.

2006-12-25 04:42:31 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

You are given the chemical equation as a sentence:
monosaccharide + monosaccharide yields disaccharide + water

Substrate of an enzyme simply refers to the reactants that are either combined or are split (enzymes can either 'cut' substrates or can 'meld' them) within the 'active site' of the enzyme.

The word 'yields' means 'results in', thus (disaccharide + water) are products and (monosaccharide + monosaccharide) are reactants.

Substrate = reactants = monosaccharide + monosaccharide

2006-12-25 22:01:08 · answer #2 · answered by teachbio 5 · 1 0

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