Science, asked by itzlisa91331, 1 year ago

explain digestion of proteins and fats in digestive tract with help of equation

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Answered by brainygirl6
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Chemical Digestion of Carbohydrates, Proteins and Fats

BY  FRANK GAVIGAN   •  OCT. 03, 2017

When you bite off a piece of bread and chew, you begin digestion, but you could never absorb nutrients if the process stopped there. As you continue chewing, your mouthful becomes sweet if you're eating carbohydrates because enzymes in your saliva begin to break complex carbs down into simple sugars. Later, in the stomach and intestines, proteins and fats are also broken down by enzymes. Without enzymes, digestion could never be completed, and you would die of malnutrition, even if you munched and chomped all day.

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Digestion and Absorption

Digestion and absorption are two very different processes that work together to ensure your gut is able to extract all the nutrients your body needs, according to Purdue University. Digestion is where nutrients in food are broken down into their component parts. Chemical digestion refers to the work performed by enzymes throughout your digestive tract, which break the bonds that hold molecules together so that proteins, carbohydrates and fats are split into single molecules. Only these smaller molecules can pass through the lining of your small intestine and be absorbed into your body.

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In your Mouth

The process of chewing food is called mechanical digestion. While it's not a chemical process, chomping your food into small pieces is the first step in chemical digestion because enzymes can only work successfully on smaller pieces of food. Glands in your mouth secrete saliva, which moistens the food and makes it stick together into lumps that can easily be swallowed. Saliva also contains the enzyme amylase. When chewing carbohydrate-rich foods, salivary amylase breaks down the carbs into smaller molecules of sugar.

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In Your Stomach

The most important enzyme excreted by the glands lining your stomach wall is called pepsin, which breaks proteins down into soluble peptides. Pepsin needs acidic conditions to work properly, so hydrochloric acid is also excreted into the stomach. Churning by strong muscles that line your stomach helps mix the enzyme into your food. The acidic conditions eventually destroy the salivary amylase, but by the time your food, now a corrosive mass called chyme, leaves your stomach, both carbohydrate and protein digestion are well advanced.


brainygirl6: welcome
Answered by viji18net
1

Answer:

These enzymes include proteases to break down proteins, lipases that digest fats and more amylase to finish splitting carbohydrates. Fats are broken down into fatty acids and glycerol, proteins into peptides and amino acids, and carbohydrates become simple sugars such as glucose and fructose

 

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