Organic
“Breakfast” Food Testing Lab
Abstract
The purpose of this lab is to find and test various types of
organic molecules including proteins, lipids, and carbohydrates in common food
products. Characteristics of organic molecules will be made evident by using
different procedures and stains to identify the macromolecules.
Introduction
Can organic molecules
be found in food? The chemistry of living systems is the chemistry of
carbon-containing compounds. Carbon's
unique chemical properties allow it to polymerize into chains by dehydration
synthesis, forming key biological macromolecules such as: proteins, lipids,
carbohydrates and (nucleic acids).
Proteins perform the
chemistry of the cell. Proteins are
linear polymers of amino acids. Because the 20 amino acids that occur in
proteins have side groups with different chemical properties, the function and
shape of a protein are critically affected by its particular sequence of amino
acids. Proteins are typically characterized as fibrous or globular.
Lipids are not soluble
in water. Fats are one type of
water-insoluble molecules called lipids.
Fats can be saturated, like animal fat or contain unsaturated fats like
margarines and oils. Fats are molecules that contain many more carbon hydrogen bonds
than carbohydrates and, thus, provide a more efficient form of long-term energy
storage. Other lipids include
phospholipids and steroids.
Carbohydrates contain many carbon hydrogen
bonds. Carbohydrates consist of monosaccharides
or polymers of monosaccharides, and are used principally for energy, which is
stored in their carbon-hydrogen bonds.
The most metabolically important carbohydrate is glucose, a six-carbon
sugar. Organisms often transport sugars
as disaccharides and therefore, cannot be utilized wile they are being
transported. Excess energy resources may
be stored in complex sugar polymers called starches (in plants) and glycogen
(in animals and fungi). The hypothesis is that if proteins, lipids, and
carbohydrates are found in basic food produces, then they will be indicated as
such using specific stains.
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