(N/A) $(1)$ Digestion of roti (carbohydrates):
$(a)$ Digestion of carbohydrates in oral cavity: In the mouth, chapati mixes with saliva. Saliva contains the enzyme salivary amylase (ptyalin), which converts the starch of the chapati into maltose, isomaltose, and small dextrins ($\alpha$-dextrin). About $30\%$ of starch is hydrolyzed in the mouth.
$\text{Starch} \xrightarrow[pH 6.8]{\text{Salivary amylase}} \text{Maltose} + \text{Isomaltose} + \alpha\text{-dextrin}$
$(b)$ Digestion of carbohydrates in the small intestine: The food moves through the esophagus to the stomach via peristalsis. The food is stored in the stomach for $4-5$ hours. There are no carbohydrate-digesting enzymes in gastric juice. This partially digested food is called chyme.
$(i)$ Pancreatic juice: Pancreatic amylase hydrolyzes the carbohydrates in chyme into disaccharides.
$\text{Polysaccharide (starch)} \xrightarrow{\text{Amylase}} \text{Disaccharides}$
$(ii)$ Intestinal juice (succus entericus): Succus entericus contains maltase, isomaltase, sucrase (invertase), lactase, and $\alpha$-dextrinase. These enzymes convert disaccharides into simple sugars like glucose, fructose, or galactose.
$\text{Maltose} \xrightarrow{\text{Maltase}} \text{Glucose} + \text{Glucose}$
$\text{Isomaltose} \xrightarrow{\text{Isomaltase}} \text{Glucose} + \text{Glucose}$
$\text{Sucrose} \xrightarrow{\text{Sucrase}} \text{Glucose} + \text{Fructose}$
$\text{Lactose} \xrightarrow{\text{Lactase}} \text{Glucose} + \text{Galactose}$
$\alpha\text{-dextrin} \xrightarrow{\alpha\text{-Dextrinase}} \text{Glucose}$
$(2)$ Digestion of protein (dal):
$(a)$ Digestion in the stomach: Gastric glands secrete gastric juice containing $HCl$ and inactive enzymes (pepsinogen and prorenin).
$\text{Pepsinogen} \xrightarrow{HCl} \text{Pepsin}$
$\text{Protein} \xrightarrow{\text{Pepsin}} \text{Peptones} + \text{Proteoses}$
$(b)$ Digestion in the small intestine:
$(i)$ Pancreatic juice: Trypsinogen is activated by enterokinase to trypsin, which then activates other enzymes.
$\text{Trypsinogen} \xrightarrow{\text{Enterokinase}} \text{Trypsin}$
$\text{Proteins} \xrightarrow{\text{Trypsin}} \text{Dipeptides}$
$(ii)$ Intestinal juice: Contains aminopeptidases and dipeptidases that break down peptides into amino acids.
$\text{Dipeptides} \xrightarrow{\text{Dipeptidase}} \text{Amino acids}$
Final end products are glucose, fructose, galactose (from carbohydrates) and amino acids (from proteins), which are absorbed by the intestinal villi.