2.2.13 practical biochem 2: quantitative tests for bio molecules Flashcards

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1
Q

what does benedict’s reagent detect

A

presence of reducing sugars

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2
Q

if more sugar present, what will happen

A
  • amount of precipitate increases
  • amount of copper (II) ions in solution decrease
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3
Q

how can we try quantify the concentration of sugar in the original sample

A

colorimetry

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4
Q

how does colorimetry work

A

by shining light through sample

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5
Q

what would we use to separate precipitate & excess benedict’s solution (supernatant)

A

centrifuge

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6
Q

describe steps of using a colorimeter

A
  1. using pipette, take supernatant & place in cuvette then placed into colorimeter
  • colour filters often used for greater accuracy
    2. using red filter (in this case), can shine light through & detect how much passes through (percentage transmission) - solution reflects blue but absorbs red
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7
Q

result if lot of copper unreacted sulfate

A

supernatant still quite blue, absorption of red light is high & percentage transmission low

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8
Q

result if little unreacted copper sulfate

A

supernatant less blue, absorption of red light is low & percentage transmission high

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9
Q

what do we often do to the colorimeter between each reading

A

zero it by placing appropriate ‘blank’ sample to reset 100% transmission/absorption eg. water

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10
Q

what result does using a colorimeter give us

A

semi-quantitative

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11
Q

what do we need to find exact amount of sugar contained in each sample

A

calibration curve

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12
Q

steps of creating a calibration curve

A
  1. take series of known conc. of reducing sugars
  2. using sample of each, do benedict’s test
  3. use colorimeter to record percentage transmission of light through each supernatant
  4. plot graph showing transmission of light against conc. of reducing sugar
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13
Q

what can we use a calibration curve for

A

use with other ‘unknown’ samples to determine conc. of sugar in original sample

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14
Q

function of biosensors

A

take biological/chemical variable, which cannot be easily measured, and convert into electrical signal

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15
Q

examples of what biosensors can be used for

A
  • detect contaminants in water/pathogens & toxins in food
  • detect airborne bacteria eg. in counter-bioterrorism programmes
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