no
Salivary amylase is not able to digest cellulose. Amylase has the ability to digest starch but cellulose is a fibre which in indigestible.
Humans can digest starch because they produce an enzyme called amylase that can break down starch into simpler sugars. However, humans lack the enzyme needed to break down cellulose, which is a complex carbohydrate found in plant cell walls. This is why humans cannot digest cellulose.
People cannot digest cellulose
No, amylase does not use cellulose as a substrate. Amylase is an enzyme that breaks down starch into simple sugars like maltose and glucose. Cellulose is a complex carbohydrate that requires other enzymes, like cellulase, for its breakdown.
No, amylase cannot break down cellulose. Amylase is an enzyme that specifically breaks down starches, while cellulose is a complex carbohydrate found in plant cell walls that requires different enzymes, such as cellulase, to break it down.
Amylase
carbohydrates are the main compounds digested by amylase
None. Animals that can digest cellulose host special bacteria to digest the cellulose molecules, and humans do not host these.
Actually ruminants cannot digest cellulose, they have symbiotic bacteria in a part of their stomach called a "rumen" digest the cellulose down to sugars and starches that the ruminants can actually digest in another part of their stomach later.
Cellulose.
No
Humans can't digest cellulose.