"Digestion of starch by salivary amylase" Essays and Research Papers

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    Bio Lab

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    Bio Lab Report In part II of the Organic Compounds in Foods lab‚ we to examining whether or not the starch in the saltine cracker can chemically break down in sugar with the presence of salivary amylase‚ which is an enzyme found in your mouth which assists in digestion. My group and I were instructed to obtain a saltine cracker from our teacher and chew on it for approximately 2 minutes. After concluding the chewing‚ we then grabbed a beaker and spit our slimy and chewed cracker into it. Subsequently

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    Physioex9.0 Ex8

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    PhysioEx 9.0 Ex. 8: Chemical and Physical Processes of Digestion - Review Sheet ACTIVITY1 Assessing Starch Digestion by Salivary Amylase 1. List the substrate and the subunit product of amylase. _starch & maltose respectively__ 2. What effect did boiling and freezing have on enzyme activity? Why? How well did the results compare with your prediction?__Boiling caused amylase to be denatured‚ thus inactivating the enzyme. Freezing has no effect. The function of an enzyme is directly related

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    Saliva Lab

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    Saliva Lab Since the amylase enzyme is present in saliva‚ starch digestion begins in the mouth. Salivary amylase changes the polysaccharide starch into many disaccharide molecules of maltase (a simple sugar) which are further broken down into glucose units by maltase enzyme in the As stated above‚ saliva contains the amylase enzyme which begins the breakdown of starches. The efficiency of starch digestion by amylase can be measured by how much simple sugar it produces under

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    DIGESTION Cooking vs. Digestive Processes Cooking Processes: Grilling Microwaving Frying Roasting Barbeque Boiling Steaming Poaching Digestive Processes: Ingestion Propulsion Mechanical digestion Chemical digestion Absorption Defecation Salivary Digestion SALIVARY DIGESTION Salivary Glands the salivary glands are a collection of accessory organs surrounding the mouth that secrete a fluid called saliva. Saliva consists of 99.5 % water and 0.5 % solutes. medium for dissolving

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    Physio Ex Exp 8

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    Chemical and Physical Processes of Digestion exercise T 8 he digestive system is a physiological marvel‚ composed of finely orchestrated chemical and physical activities. The food we ingest must be broken down to its molecular form for us to get the nutrients we need‚ and digestion involves a complex sequence of mechanical and chemical processes designed to achieve this goal as efficiently as possible. As food passes through the gastrointestinal tract‚ it is progressively broken down

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    consists of ingestion‚ digestion‚ absorption and elimination (see figure 1). The first stage of food processing is the ingestion‚ the act of eatingfollowed by digestion processes(Campbell et al.‚ 2008).The process of food broken down into simple molecules that been absorbed by the human body is called digestion.Digestion is split into two different processes which are physical digestion (grounding of large molecules of food into smaller particles) and chemical digestion (enzymes released into

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    digestive process in the mouth. Salivary amylase is created by by three large salivary glands. This amylase breaks down starch and carbohydrates. However‚ since only a few people keep the food in their mouth long enough for the amylase to digest the carbohydrates completely‚ it continues down to the stomach through the esophagus. A lot of people may think that the salivary amylase continues working on the carbohydrate. However since the stomach’s acidity is very high the salivary enzyme is inactivated. Carbohydrates

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    macrounits project

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    The food is mechanically broken down. An enzyme named salivary amylase breaks starch into chunks of glucose called dextrins and maltose(disaccharide maltose). Once the food reaches the stomach‚ the acid in the stomach inactivates all salivary amylase. Carbohydrate digestion is not conducted the stomach for this reason. Before the food approaches the small intestine‚ the pancreas secretes pancreatic amylase. The pancreatic amylase digests starch into maltose. The enzymes maltase‚ sucrose‚ and lactase

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    digestive system

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    Digestive System   Digestive system includes the stomach‚ liver‚ pancreas‚ duodenum‚ ileum and colon.   What is a Digestive system?   Digestion is a breakdown and transportation of the solid and liquid food into microscopic substances therefore theses substances are then transported into different areas of the body   The digestive system is a set of organs which transforms whatever we eat into substances that can be used in the body for energy‚ growth and repair.   Once the food has been

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    Tiltle: What was happened to the bananas? Objective: To compare the amount of reducing sugars and starch in yellow and green bananas. Introduction: Bananas are green in colour and taste flat but after they are harvested and stored for some days‚ they will turn yellow from green and become sweet. Hypothesis: The green banana tasted plain because it contained large amount of starch‚ while the yellow banana tasted sweet since it contained large amount of reducing sugars. Biological principles:

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