The structure of glycogen is virtually identical to that of amylopectin, except that the branches are more frequent.

Glycogen is the storage form of glucose in animals and humans (so it is analogous to the use of starch by plants). Glycogen is formed by the liver from glucose in the bloodstream and is stored mainly in the liver and the muscles. It is readily converted to glucose as needed by the body to satisfy its energy needs.

Glycogen

The energy reserve in animals.

Carbohydrates

Monosaccharides
glucose | α-glucose | β-glucose
fructose | ribose

Disaccharides
maltose (glucose dimers)
sucrose (mixed dimers)

Polysaccharides
cellulose
starch: amylose | amylopectin
glycogen

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