Match the following:
1.
Gall bladder
(a) Bile Juice
2.
Proteins
(b) Cow
3. Intestinal wall
(c) Absorption
4.
Rumen
(d) False feet
5. Pseudopodia
(e) Amino acids
Answers
Answer:
gall bladder bile juice
protein amino acid
cow rumen
pseudopodia false feet
intestinal wall absorption
Answer:
1.GALL BLADER -BILE JUICE
2.PROTIENS-ABSORPTION
3.INTESTINAL WALL -AMINO ACIDS
4.RUMEN-COW
5.PSEUDOPODIA - FALSE FEET
Explanation:
1.The gallbladder is a small pouch that sits just under the liver. The gallbladder stores bile produced by the liver. After meals, the gallbladder is empty and flat, like a deflated balloon. Before a meal, the gallbladder may be full of bile and about the size of a small pear.
2.Protein Absorption
In adults, essentially all protein is absorbed as tripeptides, dipeptides or amino acids and this process occurs in the duodenum or proximal jejunum of the small intestine. The peptides and/or amino acids pass through the interstitial brush border by facilitative diffusion or active transport.
3.Dietary amino acids are the major fuel of the small intestinal mucosa. Particularly, glutamate, glutamine, and aspartate are the major oxidative fuel of the intestine. Emerging evidence shows that arginine activates the mTOR signaling pathway in the small intestine.
4.The rumen, also known as a paunch, forms the larger part of the reticulorumen, which is the first chamber in the alimentary canal of ruminant animals. It serves as the primary site for microbial fermentation of ingested feed
5.Pseudopod comes from the Greek words pseudes and podos, meaning “false” and “feet” respectively. They are projections of the cytoplasm of unicellular protists or eukaryotic cell membrane. The cytoplasm fills the lamellipodium to form the projections, or the pseudo. ...