Q.27 The product(s) resulting from the hydrolysis of maltose is/are (A) a mixture of α-D-Glucose and β-D-Glucose (B) a mixture of D-Glucose and L-Glucose (C) α-D-Glucose only (D) β-D-Glucose only

Q.27 The product(s) resulting from the hydrolysis of maltose is/are
(A) a mixture of α-D-Glucose and β-D-Glucose
(B) a mixture of D-Glucose and L-Glucose
(C) α-D-Glucose only
(D) β-D-Glucose only

Maltose hydrolysis yields two molecules of D-glucose through cleavage of its α-1,4 glycosidic bond. This process occurs via enzymes like maltase or acid catalysis, fundamental in carbohydrate metabolism.

Correct Answer

The correct option is (A) a mixture of α-D-Glucose and β-D-Glucose. Upon hydrolysis, maltose breaks into two D-glucose units, which equilibrate in solution to form both α and β anomers.

Maltose Structure

Maltose consists of two α-D-glucose units linked by an α-1,4 glycosidic bond between C1 of one glucose and C4 of the other. Hydrolysis adds water across this bond, releasing free glucose molecules that can interconvert between anomeric forms.

Option Explanations

  • (A) Correct: Free D-glucose exists mainly as a mixture of α-D (36%) and β-D (64%) forms in equilibrium via mutarotation. Maltose hydrolysis produces this mixture, not exclusively one anomer.

  • (B) Incorrect: Glucose in nature is D-glucose; L-glucose is rare and not produced from maltose, a natural D-sugar disaccharide.

  • (C) Incorrect: While maltose derives from α-D-glucose, hydrolysis yields free glucose that equilibrates to both α and β forms, not α only.

  • (D) Incorrect: β-D-glucose forms part of the equilibrium but is not the sole product; α-D predominates in the ring structure before equilibration.

Option Key Reason Incorrect/Correct Biological Relevance
(A) Equilibrium mixture of anomers Matches solution behavior 
(B) No L-glucose in nature Irrelevant to biology 
(C) Ignores mutarotation Oversimplifies products 
(D) Not exclusive product Partial only 

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