| 释义 | 
		Definition of oligosaccharide in English: oligosaccharidenounˌɒlɪɡə(ʊ)ˈsakərʌɪdˌäləɡōˈsakəˌrīd Biochemistry A carbohydrate whose molecules are composed of a relatively small number of monosaccharide units.  Example sentencesExamples -  The non-structural carbohydrates in shallots and onions include glucose, fructose and sucrose together with oligosaccharides, the fructans.
 -  Unspecific porins have repeatedly been described as passive, water-filled channels facilitating the diffusion of ions and polar molecules up to the size of trimeric oligosaccharides.
 -  Pathway by which the synthesis and transfer of the lipid-linked oligosaccharide unit takes place at the membrane of the ER.
 -  There was no measurable incorporation of C into sucrose, hexoses or the raffinose family of oligosaccharides at any stage of the incubations.
 -  Prebiotics are complex carbohydrates - oligosaccharides, such as inulin and short-chain sugars.
 -  Because each monosaccharide can link to more than one other monosaccharide, oligosaccharides can be branched.
 -  Moreover, the formation of lipid rafts is thought to be favored by hydrogen bonding among the oligosaccharides in sphingolipids.
 -  Glucose accumulation rate during storage increased significantly with seed water content, which suggested the occurrence of greater sugar hydrolysis from sucrose and oligosaccharides.
 -  A major proportion of the soluble carbohydrates was made up of the raffinose series oligosaccharides, raffinose and stachyose.
 -  Complex N-linked oligosaccharides are negatively charged if they contain sialic acid.
 -  Fetuin contains six oligosaccharides chains, namely three carbohydrate units O-linked to Thr or Ser residues and three complex glycans, N-linked to Asn residues.
 -  All carbohydrates can be classified as either monosaccharides, oligosaccharides or polysaccharides.
 -  In addition to sucrose, the oligosaccharides raffinose and stachyose were also detected, but only from 55 DAA.
 -  Moreover, some authors have suggested that seed sugar content, particularly the ratio of oligosaccharides to sucrose, might be used as an indicator of seed vigour and storability.
 -  As well as the binding functionality provided by the biochemically-specific moieties they contain, the oligosaccharide might impart a steric stiffness to the polypeptide core.
 -  This may be explained by the difference in interaction of the tip with the polar zwitterionic PC headgroups and the anionic oligosaccharide headgroups of the ganglioside.
 -  Raffinose, as well as other members of the raffinose family of oligosaccharides, are important phloem transport and storage carbohydrates for many plants.
 -  These calculations indicate that the strength of key mannose-protein interactions at the monosaccharide site is preserved in both the oligosaccharides.
 -  Di- and oligosaccharides are replaced by monosaccharides, while dehydrins and other desiccation-related proteins disappear.
 -  Enzymes that act on substrates such as polypeptides, nucleic acids, oligosaccharides, or lipid membranes often interact with more than one substrate molecule.
 
    Definition of oligosaccharide in US English: oligosaccharidenounˌäləɡōˈsakəˌrīd Biochemistry A carbohydrate whose molecules are composed of a relatively small number of monosaccharide units.  Example sentencesExamples -  Moreover, the formation of lipid rafts is thought to be favored by hydrogen bonding among the oligosaccharides in sphingolipids.
 -  Moreover, some authors have suggested that seed sugar content, particularly the ratio of oligosaccharides to sucrose, might be used as an indicator of seed vigour and storability.
 -  Complex N-linked oligosaccharides are negatively charged if they contain sialic acid.
 -  Di- and oligosaccharides are replaced by monosaccharides, while dehydrins and other desiccation-related proteins disappear.
 -  The non-structural carbohydrates in shallots and onions include glucose, fructose and sucrose together with oligosaccharides, the fructans.
 -  These calculations indicate that the strength of key mannose-protein interactions at the monosaccharide site is preserved in both the oligosaccharides.
 -  Fetuin contains six oligosaccharides chains, namely three carbohydrate units O-linked to Thr or Ser residues and three complex glycans, N-linked to Asn residues.
 -  Glucose accumulation rate during storage increased significantly with seed water content, which suggested the occurrence of greater sugar hydrolysis from sucrose and oligosaccharides.
 -  Prebiotics are complex carbohydrates - oligosaccharides, such as inulin and short-chain sugars.
 -  Unspecific porins have repeatedly been described as passive, water-filled channels facilitating the diffusion of ions and polar molecules up to the size of trimeric oligosaccharides.
 -  All carbohydrates can be classified as either monosaccharides, oligosaccharides or polysaccharides.
 -  There was no measurable incorporation of C into sucrose, hexoses or the raffinose family of oligosaccharides at any stage of the incubations.
 -  Raffinose, as well as other members of the raffinose family of oligosaccharides, are important phloem transport and storage carbohydrates for many plants.
 -  Because each monosaccharide can link to more than one other monosaccharide, oligosaccharides can be branched.
 -  As well as the binding functionality provided by the biochemically-specific moieties they contain, the oligosaccharide might impart a steric stiffness to the polypeptide core.
 -  This may be explained by the difference in interaction of the tip with the polar zwitterionic PC headgroups and the anionic oligosaccharide headgroups of the ganglioside.
 -  In addition to sucrose, the oligosaccharides raffinose and stachyose were also detected, but only from 55 DAA.
 -  Pathway by which the synthesis and transfer of the lipid-linked oligosaccharide unit takes place at the membrane of the ER.
 -  A major proportion of the soluble carbohydrates was made up of the raffinose series oligosaccharides, raffinose and stachyose.
 -  Enzymes that act on substrates such as polypeptides, nucleic acids, oligosaccharides, or lipid membranes often interact with more than one substrate molecule.
 
     |