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Revision as of 08:01, 24 August 2005

Sucrose, or common table sugar, is composed of glucose and fructose.

In chemistry, a dimer is a molecule composed of two similar subunits or monomers linked together. It is a special case of a polymer. Among the most common dimers are certain types of sugar; sucrose, for example, is a dimer of a glucose molecule and a fructose molecule.

A physical dimer is a term that designates the case where intermolecular interaction brings two identical molecules closer together than other molecules. There is no chemical bonds between the physical dimer molecules.

In biology, a dimer is a protein complex made up of two subunits. In a homodimer the two subunits are identical, and in a heterodimer they differ (though they are often still very similar in structure). The subunits do not need to be covalently linked, and usually aren't.

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