The liver breaks down excess amino acids through deamination so they can be excreted, produces fibrinogen which is essential for blood clotting, and assimilates digested molecules to cells where they are used while also converting carbon into glycogen and amino acids into ammonia and urea which are excreted.
The liver breaks down excess amino acids through deamination so they can be excreted, produces fibrinogen which is essential for blood clotting, and assimilates digested molecules to cells where they are used while also converting carbon into glycogen and amino acids into ammonia and urea which are excreted.
The liver breaks down excess amino acids through deamination so they can be excreted, produces fibrinogen which is essential for blood clotting, and assimilates digested molecules to cells where they are used while also converting carbon into glycogen and amino acids into ammonia and urea which are excreted.
deamination is the breakdown of excess amino acids so they can be excreted
Fibrinogen is essential in blood clotting and is found in the blood plasma Assimilation is movement of digested molecules to cell where it used Carbon is turned into glycogen Amino acids turn into ammonia excreted by sweat and urea