Saturday, July 20, 2019
The Rate of Hydrolysis of Sucrose Essay -- Biology Science Experiments
The Rate of Hydrolysis of Sucrose      Hypothesis - The digestion of sucrose into glucose and fructose is  carried out by the presence of the enzyme Sucrase. The activity of the  enzyme will be greatest at its optimum temperature since at this  temperature the enzyme's tertiary structure will be correct to allow  the formation of the substrate-enzyme complex quickly and efficiently.  This should be at 37Ã °C (body temperature), which is the temperature of  the ileum where Sucrase is secreted and naturally functions.    The first thing to say about enzymes is that they are proteins and  they are found in all types of organisms from humans to viruses. They  function in the body as catalysts. In other words they speed up the  rate of chemical reactions in the body. Enzymes actually accelerate  chemical reactions by a factor of about 1 million. Enzymes are organic  catalysts. Without enzymes the metabolism of an organism would be too  slow for the organism to survive. The word enzyme actually means "in  yeast" as they were first discovered in these micro-organisms. Enzymes  are found inside cells (intracellular) and outside cells (extra  cellular). Intracellular enzymes are for example, those that control  metabolism while extra cellular enzymes are for example, gut digestive  juices and the enzymes secreted by bacteria, which digest their food  outside the body then reabsorb the products. Enzymes work on  particular organic chemicals, these are called substrates. So in  effect food is the substrate of digestive enzymes. Each enzyme is  specific to one or a group of particular substrates. The majority of  the reactions that occur in living organisms are enzyme-controlled.  Without enzymes toxins would soon build up and the supply of  respiratory substrate would decrease. Enzymes are proteins and thus  have a specific shape. They are therefore specific in the reactions  that they catalyse - one enzyme will react with molecules of one  substrate. The site of the reaction occurs in an area on the surface  of the protein called the active site. Since the active site for all  molecules of one enzyme will be made up of the same arrangement of  amino acids, it has a highly specific shape. Generally, there is only  one active site on each enzyme molecule and only one type of substrate  molecule will fit into it. Lock and key hypothesis description of the  specificity of t...              ... well as this the final colour was defined.    Results : my results from then on were much more reliable and the  average was easier to plot on a graph drawing my expected curve. The  first colour change was a loss of the base pink colour and the final  colour change is a measurable blue.    Throughout all these preliminary experiments and the final one all  laboratory safety precautions will be observed. To check the  reliability of my results I will take a mean average of all 3  experiments I finally did. Using the mean of all the experiments I  then will work out the standard deviation of the primary colour change  and the final colour change.    On the graphs the X axis is numbered 1-6, this corresponds to the  Sucrase Concentration 0.0%-2.5%.    Below is the preliminary experiment graph for primary colour change at  0-5% solution.    The line slopes down as the reaction time decreases in relation to the  concentration. This was the graph of the preliminary experiment after  making the changes due to evidence from preliminary experiment 1 and  2.    Prediction: I predict that the higher the concentration the faster the  reaction due to induced fit and lock and key hypothesis.                        
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