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Re: [RC] Oats - Kris

Any enzymes consumed by an animal, human or non, would have limited action,
because once they reached the stomach, they would most likely be
deactivated. Enzymes are incredibly sensitive to pH, some having a window of
about 0.2 (maybe less) on the pH scale where they are active. The extreme
acidity of the stomach would denature and inactivate most enzymes. Those
present that digest exist further down in the digestive tract where the pH
is higher.



----- Original Message -----
From: "Lif Strand" <lif.strand@xxxxxxxxx>
To: "ridecamp" <ridecamp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, March 18, 2006 11:37 PM
Subject: Re: [RC] Oats


Quoted from Sisu West Ranch's message at 08:02 PM 3/18/2006:
As far as I know, enzymes are proteins.  The digestive system uses
HCl, and special enzymes to break them up into very small segments,
and mostly their smallest segments: the amino acids.  It is only
these amino acids or small segments that are small enough to be
absorbed from a healthy gut.  For this reason, cooking which changes
the coiling of enzymes and thus inactivates them, does not in and of
itself make the protean non nutritious.

I may be misunderstanding what you're writing, so if I am, sorry.  If
I'm not misunderstanding you, then I think it works differently than
you describe.  Although enzymes are protein, their own protein is not
what is broken up into amino acids to be absorbed.  Enzymes are
catalysts which break up other proteins, also fats, carbohydrates
and, um, I forget the fourth one, into digestible form that is then
absorbed by the healthy gut.  Cooking would render the catalystic
properties of enzymes useless, but I don't know if their proteins
would then be considered nutritional.  Maybe someone more educated
than me would know (or if anyone is really interested, I could find out).


------------------------
Lif Strand, Research Associate
Southwest Center for Resource Analysis
Western New Mexico University
(505) 773-4897
(505) 212-0108 FAX


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Information, Policy, Disclaimer: http://www.endurance.net/Ridecamp
Subscribe/Unsubscribe http://www.endurance.net/ridecamp/logon.asp

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Replies
RE: [RC] Oats, Rae Callaway
Re: [RC] Oats, Diane Trefethen
Re: [RC] Oats, Lif Strand
Re: [RC] Oats, Diane Trefethen
Re: [RC] Oats, Sisu West Ranch
Re: [RC] Oats, Lif Strand