Biology, asked by jmlathan06, 8 months ago

How does Claire’s diagnosis explain why 1 mL of liquid from her small intestine digested protein slowly but 1 mg of her pure protease digested protein normally?

Answers

Answered by PaapiPandit
62

Answer:

The small intestine or small bowel is an organ in the gastrointestinal tract where most of the end absorption of nutrients and minerals from food takes place. It lies between th

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Answered by Rameshjangid
0

Answer:

Claire's diagnosis may show the absence or a very small amount of proteolytic enzymes in her small intestine.

Explanation:

Claire's diagnosis may show the absence or a very small amount of proteolytic enzymes in her small intestine.

The small intestine is the major site of protein digestion by proteases (enzymes that cleave proteins). The pancreas secretes a number of proteases as zymogens into the duodenum where they must be activated before they can cleave peptide bonds. This activation occurs through an activation cascade. A cascade is a series of reactions in which one step activates the next in a sequence that results in an amplification of the response.

Claire's diagnosis may explain the slow digestion of proteins due to the absence or decrease of proteolytic enzymes in the small intestine. That's because these enzymes must be present in the small intestine in amounts suitable for the protein digestion process to be rapid, as a digestion process, through enzymes must be. This is because enzymes are responsible for speeding up the metabolic processes, if there is a lack of enzymes, the metabolic processes become slower.

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