Q.74 Match List I with List II LIST I LIST II A. Sucrose B. Lactose C. Trehalose D. Maltose I. The dimer derived from the hydrolysis of starch and glycogen II. A major circulatory sugar in insects: used for energy III. A major animal energy source IV. A product of photosynthesis Choose the correct answer from the options given below: A-IV, B-III, C-II, D-I A-I, B-III, C-IV, D-II A-II, B-I, C-IV, D-III A-IV, B-II, C-III, D-I

Q.74 Match List I with List II

LIST I LIST II
A. Sucrose
B. Lactose
C. Trehalose
D. Maltose
I. The dimer derived from the hydrolysis of starch and glycogen
II. A major circulatory sugar in insects: used for energy
III. A major animal energy source
IV. A product of photosynthesis

Choose the correct answer from the options given below:

  1. A-IV, B-III, C-II, D-I
  2. A-I, B-III, C-IV, D-II
  3. A-II, B-I, C-IV, D-III
  4. A-IV, B-II, C-III, D-I

    The correct answer is A-IV, B-III, C-II, D-I.

    Sucrose is the primary photosynthesis product transported in plants, lactose serves as the main energy source in milk for mammals, trehalose powers insect circulation, and maltose results from starch/glycogen enzymatic breakdown.

    Statement Matching Analysis

    A. Sucrose → IV. A product of photosynthesis
    Correct. Sucrose (glucose-α1,2-fructose) forms in plant cytosol from UDP-glucose + fructose-6-P via sucrose phosphate synthase; major phloem transport sugar.

    B. Lactose → III. A major animal energy source
    Correct. Lactose (galactose-β1,4-glucose) constitutes 4-7% of mammalian milk, hydrolyzed by lactase to glucose/galactose for neonatal energy.

    C. Trehalose → II. A major circulatory sugar in insects: used for energy
    Correct. Trehalose (glucose-α1,1-glucose) is insect hemolymph sugar (1-2% concentration), more stable than glucose for flight muscle energy.

    D. Maltose → I. The dimer derived from the hydrolysis of starch and glycogen
    Correct. Maltose (glucose-α1,4-glucose) produced by amylase action on starch/glycogen during digestion/germination.

    Option Evaluation Table

    Option A B C D Correct?
    1. A-IV, B-III, C-II, D-I Photo✅ Animal✅ Insect✅ Starch✅ Yes
    2. A-I, B-III, C-IV, D-II Starch❌ Animal✅ Photo❌ Insect❌ No
    3. A-II, B-I, C-IV, D-III Insect❌ Starch❌ Photo❌ Animal❌ No
    4. A-IV, B-II, C-III, D-I Photo✅ Insect❌ Animal❌ Starch✅ No

    Sucrose as photosynthesis product, lactose as animal milk energy source, trehalose as insect circulatory sugar, and maltose from starch/glycogen hydrolysis represent perfect disaccharide-function matching for biochemistry exams.

    Disaccharide Biosynthesis & Roles

    Sucrose (A-IV): Plants synthesize sucrose in photosynthesizing leaf cells from triose phosphates. Non-reducing (α1,2 linkage blocks anomeric carbons), ideal for long-distance phloem transport without reacting.

    Lactose (B-III): Mammalian lactose synthase (galactosyltransferase + α-lactalbumin) produces β1,4-galactose-glucose in Golgi of mammary cells. Primary neonatal carbohydrate (~120 g/L human milk).

    Trehalose (C-II): Insect trehalose-6-P synthase/phosphatase pathway generates α1,1-glucose dimer. Protects proteins during desiccation; hemolymph levels rise during flight. Absent in vertebrates.

    Maltose (D-I): α-Amylase hydrolyzes internal α1,4-glucosidic bonds of amylose/amylopectin/glycogen, releasing maltose + limit dextrins. Maltase completes glucose liberation.

    Exam-Focused Comparison

    Disaccharide Source Linkage Key Feature Hydrolysis Products
    Sucrose Photosynthesis α1,2 Plant transport Glucose + Fructose 
    Lactose Milk β1,4 Animal energy Galactose + Glucose
    Trehalose Insects α1,1 Circulatory sugar 2 Glucose
    Maltose Starch α1,4 Hydrolysis dimer 2 Glucose 

    Why This Pattern Matters

    NEET/GATE tests disaccharide specificity: sucrose (plants), lactose (mammals), trehalose (arthropods), maltose (digestion). Memorize A-IV, B-III, C-II, D-I for instant matching. Common traps swap trehalose (insect-only) with sucrose or confuse lactose (milk-only) with maltose (plant storage).

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