Chew Wga ((better)) Direct
As you chew, saliva hydrates the food matrix. WGA molecules are released from the starch and gluten network. Because WGA is water-soluble, it quickly dispersates across your tongue, gums, and inner cheeks.
Listen to your mouth. If chewing bread feels like chewing glue and leaves your throat scratchy, WGA might be the hidden variable you never knew existed. chew wga
When you chew, WGA literally “glues” itself to the surface of your mouth. This is the physical sensation you perceive as stickiness or pastiness. As you chew, saliva hydrates the food matrix
Your entire oral cavity is lined with a protective layer of mucus. This mucus is rich in glycoproteins (proteins with sugar chains attached). WGA has a specific, high-affinity binding site for N-acetylglucosamine and sialic acid —two sugars abundant in human saliva and mucosal tissue. Listen to your mouth
Unlike other proteins that are easily broken down by stomach acid, WGA is remarkably stable and resistant to digestion. This is the key to its biological activity. If you chew a piece of whole wheat bread, cracker, or pasta for 60 seconds without swallowing, you aren’t just mechanically breaking down starches. You are chemically interacting with WGA.
WGA is a known anti-nutrient . In high doses (which you won’t get from normal chewing), it can interfere with nutrient absorption. However, the concentration in a single bite of bread is low. The real concern with WGA isn’t acute chewing—it’s chronic consumption in unprocessed forms.