Nutrition Test Unit 7
Acid-base balance
maintaining the proper hydrogen concentration of body fluids
phenylketonuria (PKU)
metabolic disorder caused by an enzyme deficiency metabolizing the blood, thus causing mental retardation and seizures
Complementary combinations
mixing certain plant foods to provide all essential amino acids without adding animal protein
Food intolerance
negative physical reactions to eating a food that don't involve the immune system
Amino acids
nitrogen containing chemical units that comprise proteins
Edema
accumulation of fluid in tissues
Urea
waste product of amino acid metabolism
DNA
water molecule that has the instructions for making proteins
Know how the body builds proteins
1. Stomach- proteins undergo partial digestion by pepsin 2. Small intestine- further digestion occurs as the pancreas and intestinal cells secrete protein-splitting enzymes. 3. Small intestine cells- final digestion occurs at the absorptive cells with the release of enzymes from microvilli. 4. Liver- after being absorbed, amino acids enter the portal vein and travel to the vein. 5. Rectum- very little dietary protein is excreted in feces.
Digestive process of proteins
1. begins in the stomach. Hydrochloric acid causes proteins to unfold, so pepsin, an enzyme, break aparts the peptide bonds between two amino acids. large protein chains break down into shorter polypeptide chains of several amino acids. 2. When the shortened polypeptide chains enter the small intestine, the pancreas and absorptive cells secrete protein-splitting enzymes called proteases that digest polypeptides into individual amino acids, dipeptides, and tripeptides. 3. Enzymes within the border of absorptive cells digest the simple polypeptides into amino acids
5 functions of protein
1. building tissue 2. producing enzymes 3. creates DNA and cells 4. creates hormones 5. provide energy
Know what a chain of protein is called and how it is made
A chain of proteins is called an amino acid, which can connect to another amino acid by a peptide bond
Know what the body does with proteins after digestion
After being absorbed the amino acids enter the large vein (portal vein) that takes absorbed nutrients to the liver. The liver keeps some amino acids for its needs and releases the rest into the general circulation.
how to calculate how much protein a person needs for a normal protein intake diet and a high protein intake diet. Be able to convert the protein in grams to calories
Divide your weight in pounds by 2.2 to obtain your weight in kilograms. Multiply your weight in kg by 0.8 to obtain your weight in grams
Essential Amino Acids
Histidine, Isoleucine, Leucine, Lysine, Methionine, phenylalanine, threonine, tryptophan, and valine
sickle cell anemia a. type of disease b. type of cells affected c. what changes occur in these cells d. the amino acid which gets replaced, and the amino acid replacing it
a. auto-immune and genetic; auto immune system does nothing b. red blood cells c. become sickle shaped d. valine replaces glutamic acid
Non essential Amino Acids
alanine, aspartic acid, asparagine, glutamic acid, serine, arginine, cysteine, glutamine, glycine, proline, and tyrosine.
Essential amino acids
amino acids the body can't make or can't make enough to meet its needs
Polypeptides
chains of two or more amino acids
Peptide bond
chemical attraction that connects two amino acids together
Celiac Disease
chronic disease characterized by an autoimmune response in the small intestine to the protein gluten
Protein- energy malnutrition(PEM)
condition that affects people whose diets lack adequate amounts of protein and energy
High quality protein
contains all essential amino acids; well digested and absorbed by your body; Meat, fish, poultry, eggs, milk, and milk products
Nonessential amino acids
group of amino acids that the body can make
Sulfites
group of sulfur-containing compounds in foods and often added to wines, potatoes, and shrimp and preservative
Low quality protein
lacks or contains inadequate amounts of one or more of the essential amino acids; digestive tract doesn't digest sources of low-quality protein as efficiently
Proteins
large, complex organic nutrients made up of amino acids
Legumes
plants that produce pods with a single row of seeds.
Protein folding
process by which a protein structure assumes its functional shape making it able to perform its biological function
gluconeogenesis
process by which glucose ismade from non-carb nutrients, such as amino acids
High-quality(complete) protein
protein that contains all essential amino acids in amounts that support the deposition of protein in tissues and the growth of a young person
Low-quality (incomplete) protein
protein that lacks or has inadequate amounts of one or more of the essential amino acids
Antibodies
proteins that help prevent and fight infection
Pepsin
stomach enzyme that breaks down proteins into polypeptides
three fates of lipids
stored in fat cells, energy, structure