Chapter 7: Protein
What cells do not have protein?
None. All cells contain some protein
Antibodies
disease organism-fighting proteins
Having a headache and intestinal discomfort from eating a food, without triggering the body's immune response is a sign of:
food intolerance
Potential deficiencies of a vegetarian diet?
-Iron and calcium -Vitamin D and Riboflavin
2 key factors in determining the quality of a protein?
-amino acid composition -digestability
Signs of kwishiorkor include:
-brittle hair -stunted growth -discolored patched of the skin
Proteins function as:
-compounds that help maintain fluid and pH balance -antibodies -enzymes
Treating children with PEM includes:
-hospitalization -controlled refeeding -frequent health assesment
What is true about deamination?
-occurs primarily in the liver -a process of removing the nitrogen-containing group from an unneeded amino acid -once the nitrogen is removed, the remaining acid is a carbon skeleton.
What is true about protein?
-organic molecules -contains nitrogen
Proteins are made in your body following the code found in your:
DNA
Where does protein digestion begin and end?
Stomach/Small intestinal cells
Signs of marasmus:
Weakness and wasting
After being digested, most amino acids are transported into:
absorptive cells
The end product of protein digestion is:
amino acids
Amino acids are the
building blocks of protein
The blood test BUN can be used to assess to function of the :
kidney
How do proteins contribute to acid-base balance of the blood?
they serve as buffers that resist changes in pH