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Macromolecules. Standard Qualitative Tests and Testing Your Own Food. Video Intro: Digestion. You Tube - Digestion of Carbos, Fats, and Proteins. Polysaccharide. Disaccharide (sucrose). Monosaccharide (glucose). Two Common Monosaccharides. Disaccharide. What are Carbohydrates I eat?.
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Macromolecules Standard Qualitative Tests and Testing Your Own Food
Video Intro: Digestion • You Tube - Digestion of Carbos, Fats, and Proteins
Polysaccharide Disaccharide (sucrose) Monosaccharide (glucose)
What are Carbohydrates I eat? USED FOR ENERGY STORAGE
Also need digestive enzymes • Enzymes-and-Digestion.htm • Gastric Secretion Animation • Mouth – amylase • Stomach –pepsin • Small intestine – pancreatic enzymes, lactase
What disaccharide is in beer? maltose
Qualitative • Detecting if a substance is present • You don’t know how much
Goggles and Apron • Chemicals are caustic to your eyes • Iodine stains
Dropper Full Just squeeze to fill dropper and release Exact amounts are not important 1 dropper full = 20-30 drops When it asks for…
NEVER, hold a filled pipet upside down…or hold on its side… You contaminate the bulb NEVER EVER
Activity C: For 5mL and 10 mL • Hydrochloric acid • sucrose
Positive Control Absolutely expect to see the result Use the substance (starch, glucose, etc.) Negative Control Absolutely expect to NOT see the result (may use distilled water) Controls
Lab Objective: • Describe the test that indicates the presence of most small sugars.
Recording Benedict’s Results • - blue no sugar • + blue/green trace • ++ green little sugar • +++ yellow some sugar • ++++ orange/red much sugar
Lab Objectives: • Describe the test that indicates the presence of starch. • IODINE IS POISONOUS!!!
Iodine Test negative positive
Lab Objective: • Define hydrolysis and give an example of the hydrolysis of carbohydrates. • ANIMATION LINKS:Digestion in the Stomach-You Tube • Hydrolysing starch
Lab Objective: • Give examples of the formation/ breakdown of a: • monosaccharide • disaccharide • polysaccharide
Lab Objective: • Name the monosaccharide components of sucrose and starch.
Simple Sugars • Called monosaccharides • primary function = energy • Your SAMPLE will be glucose
Disaccharide • Double Sugar • Combined simple sugars • YOUR SAMPLE WILL BE SUCROSE
Now Let’s Demonstrate how Digestion Might Work • Click Here Howstuffworks "The Digestive System"
Tube 1-blue (-) still sucrose, a disaccharide 2 1 Tube 2- heat broke bonds –so tested orange (+) for glucose
Tube 3 • Negative for because it is starch (a polysaccharide) STARCH
Polysaccharides • Shorter sugars link together to form complex sugars • Your starch sample will be POTATO STARCH
Tube 4 Starch Not heated – so it would be (+) for iodine, blue-black
Tube 5 • Heated 5 minutes – added Benedicts • Starch may just start to break down, so just a little (+) for glucose or (-) starch did not break down yet here
Tube 6 • Heated 5 minutes added Iodine • Brown – somewhat broken down – so just partially (+) for starch Tube 6
Tube 7 • Heated 15 minutes • Added Benedicts (for a glucose test) Starch is broken down to its monomers, glucose Tube 7
Tube 8 • Heated 15 minutes – Tested for starch • Negative, because it is broken down to glucose TUBE 8
Explain Benedict’s test on sucrose • AT first sucrose is (-) with Benedicts because it is a disaccharide. • After hydrolysis (heating and acid), the monosaccharide glucose is (+)
Explain the iodine test with starch • At first starch is (+) with iodine. • After hydrolysis, the starch breaks down to glucose and tests (-) with iodine.
Explain Benedicts with starch. • At first starch would be (-) for it is not glucose, but is a polysaccharide. • After hydrolysis, glucose is formed when the bonds break.
Why does hydrolysis of starch take longer than of sucrose? • Starch is a polysaccharide, more bonds to break. • Sucrose is a disaccharide.
Complex Carbohydrates • Starch -storage in plants • Cellulose -fiber • Glycogen-storage in animals
SAFETY • IF A SOLID, cut into little pieces • Rinse razor blades under water, do not wipe across the blade • Put used blades at the end of the period in the “used beaker” on the cart
TESTING FOR FATS AND PROTEINS • 1. Wear goggles and aprons. • 2. One set-up per pair. • 3. Reference sheets on lab tables. • 4. Limitations of this lab: do not know howmuch of the sample you have.
BEFORE YOU BEGIN THE LAB of Testing for Fats and Proteins • Read Lipids Intro p. 9 and answer the questions to the left (3) • Read Proteins Intro p. 10 and answer the questions to the right (3)
Fat Test with Brown PaperTranslucent (light can go through)= + fat test