1 / 32

CH 6: Proteins and Amino Acids

CH 6: Proteins and Amino Acids. Proteins. Consider last as protein is the body’s least desirable source of energy 4 kcal/gram When body uses protein for energy it is not available to perform other critical functions No protein stores – all protein has a function in the body.

venecia
Download Presentation

CH 6: Proteins and Amino Acids

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CH 6: Proteins and Amino Acids

  2. Proteins • Consider last as protein is the body’s least desirable source of energy • 4 kcal/gram • When body uses protein for energy it is not available to perform other critical functions • No protein stores – all protein has a function in the body

  3. Chemical Nature of Proteins • Proteins are made from 20 different amino acids 9 of which are essential. • Each amino acid has an amino group, an acid group, a hydrogen atom, and a side group. • It is the side group that makes each amino acid unique. • Amino acids all contain the elements: C, H, O, N • Carbs and lipids do not contain N • Cannot make protein from carbs and lipids

  4. © 2008 Thomson - Wadsworth

  5. Chemical Nature of Proteins • Proteins are chains of amino acids (a.a.) joined by peptide bonds • Order of the a.a. is determined by your DNA • The sequence of amino acids in each protein determines its unique shape and function. • For the protein to function the amino acids must be in the correct order and the chain must fold up properly

  6. © 2008 Thomson - Wadsworth

  7. © 2008 Thomson - Wadsworth

  8. Amino Acids • The body cannot make 9 of the amino acids – these are the essential amino acids • These amino acids must be supplied by the diet • The body can make 11 of the amino acids • These are the nonessential a.a. • Some amino acids are conditionally essential, required under certain conditions

  9. Amino Acids • Diet must provide all 9 of the essential a.a. on a regular/daily basis for proteins to be made • Need all 20 a.a. to make most proteins • Animal sources of proteins contain all 9 essential aa (one exception) • Plant sources are missing or low in at least one essential aa (one exception) – page 188

  10. Protein Intake • Recommended level of intake is expressed 2 ways: • 10 – 25 % daily caloric intake • 0.8 grams protein per kg body weight (RDA) • Computer programs use this value • Most meet this level EASILY

  11. Protein Function • Growth, maintenance, and repair of body tissue • Need protein to make muscles, skin, hair, blood vessels…….. • Cannot grow without protein • Replace lining of GI tract every 3 days (maintenance example)

  12. Protein Function • Enzymes • Enzymes are proteins that catalyze (speed up) chemical reactions • Every reaction in the body requires a specific enzyme

  13. Protein Function • Hormones • Hormones are chemical messengers • Travel to target cells/organs and ilicit a response • Examples: • Insulin and glucagon • Growth hormone • Thyroxin – regulates metabolic rate

  14. Protein Function • Antibodies • Component of immune system • Attack foreign substances in the body

  15. Protein Function • Transportation of Substances • Proteins are needed to transport lipids in the blood • Proteins are needed to transport substances across cell membranes • Need for nerve and muscle contraction • Proteins are needed to absorb calcium and iron

  16. Protein Function • Fluid Balance • Proteins attract water • Proteins are too big to pass through plasma membranes or out of capillaries • The water moves in and out of the blood • If protein levels in the blood drop, water leaks out of the blood into surrounding tissues  edema

  17. Protein Function • Fluid Balance • Generally proteins do not leave their compartments • Fluids can move among compartments

  18. Protein Function • Edema occurs when there are inadequate plasma proteins • This occurs when: • Liver disease • Inadequate protein/food intake • Kidney disease  blood proteins excreted • Injury breaks open cells

  19. Protein Function • Acid Base Balance • Proteins can act as acids and bases • Help keep body fluids at a safe pH • Serve as buffers in the body

  20. Protein Function • Energy • 4 kcal/gram • Use as a source of energy when glucose/glycogen stores are empty

  21. Amino Acids • The body regularly breaks down proteins and remakes them or uses them for energy as needed – see page 199 • If an essential a.a. is missing the body cannot make all of the proteins it needs • Hair and nails may grow more slowly • Immune system compromised (antibodies are proteins)

  22. Nitrogen Balance • Positive Nitrogen Balance • Making more protein than breaking down • Anabolism > catabolism • Pregnant women • Infants and children • Athletes (building muscle) • Recovering from surgery, injury, or illness

  23. Nitrogen Balance • Negative Nitrogen Balance • Breaking down more protein than you are making • Catabolism > anabolism • Illness, fever • Burn victims • Starvation/anorexia

  24. Nitrogen Balance • In Zero Nitrogen Balance • Protein made = protein broken down • Anabolism = catabolism • Most adults are in zero nitrogen balance

  25. Protein in the Diet • Complete Proteins • Contain all 9 essential a.a. in adequate amounts • Food Sources • Most animal sources of protein are complete proteins (exception is gelatin) • Meat, poultry, fish, eggs, dairy • Soy products (plant source of complete protein)

  26. Protein in the Diet • Incomplete Proteins • Lack or are low in 1 or more of the essential a.a. • Food Sources • Most plant sources are incomplete proteins • Nuts, seeds, legumes, grains, and vegetables • Page 188 • Gelatin

  27. Protein in the Diet • Complementary Proteins • Two or more protein sources that together provide all 9 of the essential a.a. • Most combinations of at least 2 categories of plant proteins will complement each other • Seeds and nuts (with legumes) • Grains (with legumes) • Legumes (with seeds, nuts, grains) • Vegetables (with grains, nuts, seeds)

  28. © 2008 Thomson - Wadsworth

  29. Protein in the Diet • Examples of meals/foods containing complementary proteins: • Rice and beans • …..

  30. Protein Digestion • Digestion • Mouth • Stomach • Protein is denatured by hydrochloric acid. • Pepsinogen is converted into its active form pepsin by hydrochloric acid. • Pepsin chemically breaks proteins into smaller polypeptides

  31. Protein Digestion • In the Small Intestine • Pancreatic enzymes (proteases) digest protein into short peptide chains called oligopeptides, which contain four to nine amino acids. • SI enzymes (peptidases) split proteins into amino acids.

  32. Protein Absorption • Amino acids are absorbed into the cells of the SI and enter the blood • Amino acids are transported to the liver for processing

More Related