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| Carbohydrase |
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Starch is a very large molecule that contains many
sugar (glucose) molecules joined together. Carbohydrase enzymes
break the bonds between sugar molecules to make a small sugar molecule
called maltose. The final stage of digestion sees this molecule
split into glucose for absorption.

There are several different carbohydrase
enzymes that break down complex polysaccharides like starch but
the main one in digestion is called amylase. This enzyme is found
in saliva, which is added to the food in the mouth and is also in
the digestive juices produced by the pancreas.
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| Lipase |
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Fats
and oils are made up of two types of molecules: fatty acids and
glycerol. The enzymes
lipase breaks apart the bonds that hold together them together before
they are absorbed in the small intestine.

Lipase
is added to the food in digestive juices that are produced by the
pancreas and fats are digested in the first part of the small intestine.
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| Protease |
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Proteins
are large molecules that contain a long chain of amino acids joined
end-to-end. They are sometimes called polypeptides. They
are digested by a group of enzymes called proteases that break the
bonds between individual amino acids in the protein chain.

There are two main types of protease
enzymes involved in human digestion. Pepsin is the protease that
is added to food in the juices secreted by the wall of the stomach.
It starts the digestion of the proteins and works best in the acid
conditions found in the stomach. The second protease is Trypsin.
This is added in juices from the pancreas and completes the digestion
of proteins in the small intestine. It works best at neutral pH.
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| Stomach
acid |
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The stomach is a pretty harsh environment. Specialised cells in
the stomach wall produce large amounts of hydrochloric acid and
this means that the stomach is about pH2. This acid can sometimes
cause stomach ulcers if the protective layer on the inside of the
stomach wall is damaged.
The acid in the stomach helps to kill any bacteria
that may be on the food. It is not foolproof though because some
micro-organisms that cause food-poisoning are adapted to be able
to survive in the stomach acids. The low pH provides an environment
that allows the protease Pepsin to be active. This starts the digestion
of proteins
as the food is churned around in the stomach.
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Bile
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Bile is produced in the liver and stored in the gall bladder. As
food leaves the stomach, bile is squirted along the bile duct and
into the duodenum. It is extremely important as it helps to neutralise
the acidic contents of the stomach as they enter the top of the
small intestine. This prevents the acid from damaging the small
intestine which is kept at a pH of about 7.4 (just slightly alkali).
Bile also helps to emulsify fats
in the food. The digestive juices are all water-based and fats in
the food would not normally mix with them. The bile allows the fats
to mix in with the watery digestive juices and allow the enzyme
lipase to digest the fats efficiently.
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