All monosaccharides are reducing sugars because they either have an aldehyde group (if they are aldoses) or can tautomerize in solution to form an aldehyde group (if they are ketoses). This includes common monosaccharides like
galactose,
glucose,
glyceraldehyde,
fructose,
ribose, and
xylose. Many
disaccharides, like
cellobiose,
lactose, and
maltose, also have a reducing form, as one of the two units may have an open-chain form with an aldehyde group. However,
sucrose and
trehalose, in which the
anomeric carbon atoms of the two units are linked together, are nonreducing disaccharides since neither of the rings is capable of opening. In glucose
polymers such as
starch and starch-
derivatives like
glucose syrup,
maltodextrin and
dextrin the
macromolecule begins with a reducing sugar, a free aldehyde. When starch has been partially
hydrolyzed the chains have been split and hence it contains more reducing sugars per gram. The percentage of reducing sugars present in these starch derivatives is called
dextrose equivalent (DE).
Glycogen is a highly branched polymer of glucose that serves as the main form of carbohydrate storage in animals. It is a reducing sugar with only one reducing end, no matter how large the glycogen molecule is or how many branches it has (note, however, that the unique reducing end is usually covalently linked to
glycogenin and will therefore not be reducing). Each branch ends in a nonreducing sugar residue. When glycogen is broken down to be used as an energy source, glucose units are removed one at a time from the nonreducing ends by enzymes. ==Characterization==