In this session, we continued looking at sugars and starches, and we saw how starches can be broken back down into simple sugars. We used iodine to test for starch, and Benedict's Reagent to test for simple sugars.
What are sugars and carbohydrates?
Carbohydrates are sugars, starches and cellulose, and as the name suggests, they contain only carbon, hydrogen and oxygen.
From the Royal Society of Chemistry's 'Chemistry for Biologists':
"Carbohydrates (also called saccharides) are molecular compounds made from just three elements: carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Monosaccharides (e.g. glucose) and disaccharides (e.g. sucrose) are relatively small molecules. They are often called sugars. Other carbohydrate molecules are very large (polysaccharides such as starch and cellulose)."
Carbohydrates: rice, honey, sucrose, and glucose |
We considered some different types of sugar and looked at molecular models. Table sugar is sucrose, while the sugar made by photosynthesis is glucose. Dextrose tablets sold in pharmacies are also glucose (dextrose is just another name for glucose from a natural source). Fructose or 'fruit sugar' is very similar to glucose in structure.
Monosaccharides are simple sugars, which means they can't be broken down into simpler compounds. They are single links in a chain. Glucose, fructose and galactose are common simple sugars.
Disaccharides contain two simple sugars joined together, so they're a chain made of two links. Sucrose is a disaccharide -it contains made from one glucose molecule joined to one fructose molecule. Maltose is another disaccharide and one place this occurs is in the mouth, after we have chewed food and starches have started to break down.
Monosaccharides are simple sugars, which means they can't be broken down into simpler compounds. They are single links in a chain. Glucose, fructose and galactose are common simple sugars.
Disaccharides contain two simple sugars joined together, so they're a chain made of two links. Sucrose is a disaccharide -it contains made from one glucose molecule joined to one fructose molecule. Maltose is another disaccharide and one place this occurs is in the mouth, after we have chewed food and starches have started to break down.
Testing for Sugars - Benedict's Reagent
We introduced Benedict's Reagent (or Benedict's solution), which is used to test for reducing sugars. 'Reducing sugars' include all monosaccharides - eg glucose and fructose, and also some 'reducing' disaccharides, including maltose. It does not detect sucrose; sucrose is known as a 'non-reducing sugar'. 'Reducing sugar' just means that
Angie made Benedict's reagent from copper sulphate, sodium citrate and sodium carbonate. It is a transparent blue solution which, if heated with reducing sugars, produces a brick - red precipitate. What this means in practice is that the solution will turn cloudy and anything from yellow to orange to brick - red.
Angie made Benedict's reagent from copper sulphate, sodium citrate and sodium carbonate. It is a transparent blue solution which, if heated with reducing sugars, produces a brick - red precipitate. What this means in practice is that the solution will turn cloudy and anything from yellow to orange to brick - red.
Honey, glucose and sugar solutions with Benedict's Reagent |
We placed samples of glucose (dextrose tablets), honey and table sugar in test tubes with some Benedict's Reagent, and put them in a hot water bath for 5 minutes. The dextrose tablets and honey produced an orange-yellow precipitate, while the sucrose solution remained transparent blue.
Positive result appearing! |
Using Benedict's solution and heating is the classic test for the presence of glucose and other reducing sugars, but a quicker alternative is to use ready-made glucose test sticks. These are sold so you can test blood or urine for the presence of glucose. We added honey solution, glucose solution and sucrose solution to some of these, and saw that the colour change was similar to that seen with Benedict's solution.
Saliva breaks down starch!
Alison's initials in spit |
We each took a piece of filter paper which had been soaked in rice water - a starch solution. The starchy filter paper was wrapped around a glass slide. We put saliva on a matchstick and wrote our initials on the filter paper in saliva. Next, we added a few drops of iodine solution to the filter paper. The areas containing starch immediately turned blue-black - this is the standard test for the presence of starch, Our initials appeared in white. Angie had been very much looking forward to showing everyone this activity so was pleased that it was such a hit! We had some creative patterns drawn in spit. We could have just stopped working at this point and left everybody happily experimenting with spit, starch and iodine!
So what happened here? Saliva contains the enzyme amylase, and this breaks starch down into maltose, which is two units of glucose joined together - so it's breaking down a long chain of glucose molecules into short couples. The starch in our initials was quickly broken down. We tested that our saliva was working by spitting into a test tube and adding starch solution, then iodine. Initially the solution turned blue-black, but then it began to clear around the saliva. We found that if our test tubes were kept warm, the blue-black colour cleared faster. This gave us evidence that our amylase could work to digest starch on a larger scale than the filter paper initials. Lachlan's saliva appeared to be very effective!
Visking Tubing as a Model Gut
Next, we tried to model one of the processes which happen during digestion. We made a model gut from Visking tubing, and added some cooked rice (with the cooking water) . The tubing was placed inside a large test tube, which was filled with water to the same level as the rice and water inside the tubing. This was quite tricky to set up.
Testing for starch inside and outside the visking tubing. |
Our scientists generously donated some amylase and added this to the visking tubing in the model gut.
We kept our model guts warm by holding them in our hands or placing them in a warm water bath. At intervals (about 10 minutes) we tested again for glucose inside and outside the tubing. We took care to keep one pipette for sampling from inside the tube, and one for outside the tube, to avoid contaminating our samples.
This is what we hoped would be happening, at the molecular level:
Everyone had a positive result using Benedict's solution on the sample taken from inside the visking tubing, but it took a while to find sugars present outside the tubing. Angie only found out the real answer to to this later! See 'Digestion Discussion' below for the full explanation. We considered why this might have been. Why hadn't much glucose diffused through the partially-permeable Visking tubing? Temperature was likely to be a factor, and also the liquid level had fallen so low in some of the tubes, after repeated sampling for tests, that there may not have been sufficient fluid left in there to allow diffusion to occur. Another possibility was that our rice and starch solution was so concentrated that the starch had formed a coating on the tubing and was blocking diffusion. If we wanted to investigate further, we would need to set up an experiment where we varied just one of these things at a time. The main reason which Angie only worked out later, though, is that salivary enzymes break starch down into maltose initially, and while maltose is a reducing sugar, it is too large to easily diffuse through the Visking tubing. It's great when you solve a mystery!
This is what we hoped would be happening, at the molecular level:
Everyone had a positive result using Benedict's solution on the sample taken from inside the visking tubing, but it took a while to find sugars present outside the tubing. Angie only found out the real answer to to this later! See 'Digestion Discussion' below for the full explanation. We considered why this might have been. Why hadn't much glucose diffused through the partially-permeable Visking tubing? Temperature was likely to be a factor, and also the liquid level had fallen so low in some of the tubes, after repeated sampling for tests, that there may not have been sufficient fluid left in there to allow diffusion to occur. Another possibility was that our rice and starch solution was so concentrated that the starch had formed a coating on the tubing and was blocking diffusion. If we wanted to investigate further, we would need to set up an experiment where we varied just one of these things at a time. The main reason which Angie only worked out later, though, is that salivary enzymes break starch down into maltose initially, and while maltose is a reducing sugar, it is too large to easily diffuse through the Visking tubing. It's great when you solve a mystery!
Starch present inside, but not outside, the tubing, at the start and end of the test. |
Model guts in warm water bath, to help our amylase along. |
At the end of the day, Angie re-tested the liquid outside the visking tubing and found reducing sugar present outside the membrane in all the models . It all makes sense now! |
Hydrolysis of starches
Starch is broken down into sugars by a process called hydrolysis.
Breaking starch down
In animals, during digestion, starch molecules are broken down in the body into small glucose molecules, which can pass through the gut wall and into the bloodstream as an energy supply for the body’s cells. The enzyme amylase is the biological catalyst for this reaction.
Amylase is found in the mouth and gut of animals. The stomach also contains acid, which can also break down starch. The breakdown of starch can be carried out in the laboratory using acid or amylase. Enzymes such as amylase act as biological catalysts in the breakdown of complex food molecules into smaller ones in the digestive system.
Hydrolysis of starchStarch molecules break down by reacting with water molecules. If any molecule reacts with water molecules to break apart, then this is called an hydrolysis reaction.
Using acid to break the bonds between sugars
Another way of breaking down starches is by heating them with an acid. This breaks the bonds between the long chains of sugars. This process can also break the bonds between simple sugars in sucrose, producing glucose and fructose.
Angie demonstrated that sucrose solution does not produce a colour change when heated with Benedict's solution, so does not contain free glucose. However, when sucrose solution is heated with hydrochloric acid, then it tests positive for glucose. The sucrose molecule, which was one glucose molecule joined to a fructose molecule, had been broken down into the simple sugars.
Digestion Discussion
Our model gut represents some aspects of human digestion, but digestion occurs in several stages. We chew food, then saliva acts on it, then stomach acid and enzymes act on it, and finally the gut aborbs nutrients. Digestion is a big topic and one which you'd need to study separately, but when you look at it, think about our activity and consider how it was similar.
We used saliva to help break down starches into components. One component of saliva is the enzyme amylase, which breaks starch down into maltose. Benedict's test detects the presence of maltose - it is a reducing sugar. However, maltose is a disaccharide; it is made from two glucose molecules joined together. This means its molecule size is larger than a monosaccharide, so little, if any, will diffuse through Visking tubing. Over time, and in the presence of water, and especially if there is an acid environment, the maltose will break down ('hydrolyse') into two glucose molecules, which can pass through the Viking tubing - and some maltose molecules will also diffuse through on their own. They can 'get lucky', and fit through holes in the selectively permeable membrane if they hit it at the right angle! Think about our molecular models from last time and how a short chain might fit through the net sometimes.
Here's a nice summary of what happens in human digestion:
Why did it take so long to find reducing sugars outside the Visking tubing?
We used saliva to help break down starches into components. One component of saliva is the enzyme amylase, which breaks starch down into maltose. Benedict's test detects the presence of maltose - it is a reducing sugar. However, maltose is a disaccharide; it is made from two glucose molecules joined together. This means its molecule size is larger than a monosaccharide, so little, if any, will diffuse through Visking tubing. Over time, and in the presence of water, and especially if there is an acid environment, the maltose will break down ('hydrolyse') into two glucose molecules, which can pass through the Viking tubing - and some maltose molecules will also diffuse through on their own. They can 'get lucky', and fit through holes in the selectively permeable membrane if they hit it at the right angle! Think about our molecular models from last time and how a short chain might fit through the net sometimes.Here's a nice summary of what happens in human digestion:
Carbohydrase enzymes are secreted by the mouth, pancreas and small intestine. The carbohydrase enzyme,amylase is secreted by the mouth and found in saliva. It starts to work as soon as we begin to chew our food. Amylase digests long, complex starch (polysaccharide) molecules, into smaller, simpler maltose (disaccharide) molecules. As maltose is a disaccharide it still needs further digestion before it can be absorbed. The enzyme maltase breaks it down into glucose.
In our bodies, salivary enzymes start off the digestive process, along with chewing, but further digestion in the stomach breaks maltose down into glucose, which is the form that our bodies can absorb. Digestion occurs at more than one site - so our model is very simple compared to what happens in the body. Glucose does diffuse through the mucosa (mucous membranes inside the gut) in our bodies as it does in the Visking tubing, but as well as this 'passive transport', our bodies also use 'active transport' to take up all of the glucose. Passive transport would just equalise the concentration either side of the membrane, but our bodies want to get all the available glucose from the food, so we also use something called Active transport, which you can read about in this BBC Bitesize section on movement across cell membranes .
You can read a critique of the Visking tubing gut model if you'd like to consider further how this model worked, and how it compares to what happens in our bodies.
Links
Carbohydrates and testing for them - BBC Bitesize
BBC Bitesize: Enzymes and Digestion
Investigating the effect of amylase on a starchy foodstuff | Nuffield Foundation
BBC Bitesize: Enzymes and Digestion
Investigating the effect of amylase on a starchy foodstuff | Nuffield Foundation
Evaluating Visking tubing as a model gut - Nuffield Practical Science
Starch and glucose - diffusion through semi-permeable membrane