Home
Class 11
BIOLOGY
The number of 'ends' in a glycogen molec...

The number of 'ends' in a glycogen molecule would be

A

Equal to the number of branches plus one

B

Equal to the number of branch points

C

One

D

Two, one on the left side and another on the right side

Text Solution

Verified by Experts

The correct Answer is:
A

Glycogen is multi branched polysaccharide known as animal starch.
Promotional Banner

Topper's Solved these Questions

  • BIOMOLECULES

    KUMAR PRAKASHAN|Exercise SECTION -E SOLUTION OF NCERT EXEMPLAR (VERY SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS (VSQ))|7 Videos
  • BIOMOLECULES

    KUMAR PRAKASHAN|Exercise SECTION -E SOLUTION OF NCERT EXEMPLAR (SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS)|5 Videos
  • BIOMOLECULES

    KUMAR PRAKASHAN|Exercise SECTION -D TEXTUAL EXERCISE|15 Videos
  • BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION

    KUMAR PRAKASHAN|Exercise OBJECTIVE SECTION (FILL IN THE BLANKS)|10 Videos
  • BODY FLUIDS AND CIRCULATION

    KUMAR PRAKASHAN|Exercise BODY FLUIDS AND CIRCULATION (FILL IN THE BLANKS )|10 Videos

Similar Questions

Explore conceptually related problems

How many molecules are there in a 3.46 g sample of hydrogen chloride, HCl? Note: The number of molecules in a sample is related to moles of compound (1 mol HCl = 6.023 xx 10^(23) HCl molecules). Therefore if you first convert grams HCl to moles, then you can convert moles to number of molecules).

Calculate the number of degrees of freedom of molecules of hydrogen in 1 cubic.cm of hydrogen gas at NTP.

If elements with principal quantum number ngt 4 were not allowed in nature, the number of possible elements would be:

The number of polypeptide chains present in a molecule of haemoglobin is/are