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Question

Why sucrose is a non-reducing sugar?


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Solution

Non – Reducing sugars

  • Non-reducing sugars do not have a free ketone or aldehyde group.
  • These sugars have acetal in place of hemiacetal.
  • An acetal consists of two O-R group, one -R and -H group respectively.
  • All these groups are attached to the same carbon.

Sucrose is a non-reducing sugar because

  • Sucrose is non-reducing sugar due to the linkage between both the anomeric carbon atoms.
  • The two monosaccharide units are held together by a glycosidic linkage between C1 of α-glucose and C2 of β-fructose.
  • Since the reducing groups of glucose and fructose are involved in glycosidic bond formation, sucrose is a non-reducing sugar.
  • Anomeric carbon of both the monosaccharides are involved in glycoside or acetal formation. So it does not have a free -CHO group

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