Creado por ashiana121
hace más de 9 años
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Pregunta | Respuesta |
Why does it often take more than one enzyme to completely break down a large molecule? | Enzymes are specific; one enzyme breaks down a molecule into smaller sections and other enzymes break down these smaller sections |
What is the name given to the individual units that the enzymes are broken down into? | Monomers |
In starch digestion, what is the first enzyme called and where it is produced? | Amylase - by the salivary glands and by the pancrease |
What does amylase hydrolyse? | The alternate glycosidic bonds of the starch molecules |
What does this produce? | The disaccharide maltose |
Which enzyme hydrolysed maltose into alpha glucose? | Maltase |
Where is maltase produced? | The lining of the intestine |
Food is taken into the mouth and chewed by the teeth. This breaks the food into small pieces, giving it a what? | Large surface area |
Where is saliva secreted from? | The salivary glands |
Which of the enzymes is in saliva? | Salivary amylase |
What else is in saliva that helps amylase to work? | Mineral salts to maintain pH at around neutral - optimum for amylase for work |
What does the HCl in the stomach do? | Denatures salivary amylase and so prevents further hydrolysis of starch |
What secretion is the food mixed with as it passes from the stomach to the small intestine? | Pancreatic juices |
What enzyme is in the pancreatic juice? | Pancreatic amylase |
What does pancreatic amylase do? | Hydrolyses the remaining starch into maltose |
What else is in pancreatic juice? | Mineral salts - again to maintain pH at neutral so amylase can function |
What do muscles in the intestine wall do? | Move food along down the small intestine |
Which enzyme does the epithelial lining of the small intestine produce? | Maltase |
Maltase hydrolyses maltose into _______ | Alpha glucose |
Where is the enzyme that breaks down sucrose secreted? | The small intestine epithelial lining |
What is this enzyme called? | Sucrase |
Why is it essential for foods containing sucrose to be broken down by the teeth? | Because sucrose is usually contained within the cells |
What does sucrase hydrolyse? | The single glycosidic bond between glucose and fructose |
In what products is lactose found? | Dairy |
Where is lactose digested and by what enzyme? | Small intestine - lactase |
What two monomers are joined by a single gylcosidic bond that make up lactose? | Glucose and galactose |
Why do babies have large amounts of the lactase enzyme? | Milk is the only food they eat |
As milk becomes a smaller part of our diet in adults, what happens to the production of lactase during childhood? | It naturally diminishes |
However what can happen? | The reduction is so great some people produce little or no lactase at all |
Because there is no lactase to break down the lactose when it reaches the small intestine, what breaks it down instead? | Microorganisms |
What do the microorganisms release in large volumes? | Gas |
What does this result in? | Bloating, nausea, diarrhoea and cramps |
How can this be avoided? | By avoiding products containing lactose |
What is the main problem this causes? | Calcium deficiency |
How can this be solved? | Eating calcium rich foods or adding lactase to products containing lactose before eating it |
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