Protein Structure
Protein Digestion
Macro-nutrients
Carb Structure
Carb Digestion
100

This basic building block of proteins has an amino and a carboxyl group.

Amino acid

100

Protein digestion starts here in the body

stomach

100

The three main macronutrients.

Carbs, protein, fat

100

One-unit sugars such as glucose

Monosaccharides

100

The very first place carbohydrate digestion begins.

mouth

200

Humans commonly use about this many different amino acids to build proteins.

20

200

Pancreatic enzymes keep breaking down proteins here.

Small intestine

200

Calories per gram in carbs or protein.

4

200

Names of common monosaccharides

Glucose, Fructose, Galactose

200

The most important carbohydrate

Glucose

300

These amino acids must come from food because the body cannot make them.

Essential amino acids

300

Proteins are broken down into amino acid chains of this length or shorter in order to be transported into the cells.

Tri- or three

300

This macronutrient has the most calories per gram.

Fat

300

Many (10+) sugar units linked together

Polysaccharide

300

What is unique about glucose that makes it important

cross the blood-brain barrier

400

These amino acids can be made by the body, but only when conditions are good.

Nonessential (or “conditionally nonessential”) amino acids

400

Type of acid in the stomach that begins breaking down proteins.

Hydrochloric acid

400

What is the recommended dietary calorie recommendation for an average adult?

2000 cal/day

400

Glucose + galactose = this sugar

lactose

400

This hormone moves carbohydrates into the cells.

Insulin

500

The chemical bond that links one amino acid to the next.

Peptide bond

500

Term for unwrapping of a protein structure

denature

500

When the body runs low on carbs, it may turn this macronutrient into glucose.

protein

500

Plant fiber made of glucose chains we can’t digest.

Cellulose

500

Carbohydrate that cannot be digested by humans

Dietary Fiber