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Page ___ MOVEMENT OF MATERIALS THROUGH MEMBRANES Name ____________________________ Pr____ All cells are surrounded by a plasma (cell) membrane. This membrane serves many functions. One function is to control what goes into and out of a cell. Cells use this membrane to keep their internal environment different from the outside environment. If they didn’t, there would be just a chaotic mixture of chemicals inside the cell, and these would not be conducive to life. Anything entering or leaving a cell must pass through the cell membrane. The cell membrane has pores in it that are made out of protein channels. Some materials pass into a cell easily, others do not. Of those that pass through, some pass through without any work on the part of the cell, others are “pumped” in or out by special kinds of protein pumps in the cell membrane. How will you know if sugar, starch, protein, or salt can go through a cell membrane when you can’t see them? You can use indicators. As the teacher demonstrates how the following indicators work, please fill in the chart below: Molecule Indicator Original color Color if molecule is present Sugar Starch Protein NaCl In this lab we will investigate the movement of materials through a cell membrane by using a “fake” cell membrane called dialysis tubing. This tubing has microscopic holes in it that are about the size of REAL cell membrane protein channels. Because the dialysis tubing is not real, we can assume that the tubing is not “pumping” anything and that all movement of materials across the membrane is passive (that is, takes no effort on the part of the tubing). Also, the dialysis tubing (our cheap dialysis tubing is called “serpent skin”) is neither hydrophobic nor hydrophilic. Hypothesis Prediction: Of the following compounds, which ones do you think will easily pass through a cell membrane? Circle your predictions. Glucose Reason: Starch Protein NaCl WHY do you think the compounds you circled will easily pass though a cell membrane? _____________________________________________________________________ Procedure 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Tie off one end of your “cell” as shown: Squirt three pipette’s worth of each of the four solutions into a small beaker. Stir it with the pipette that is sitting in the beaker. Pour 2/3 of this solution in to your “cell.” Tie off the other end of your “cell”. Rinse your “cell” very well. Pat it dry. Place your “cell” in the larger beaker and cover it with water. 8. While your “cell” is sitting, test the contents of the rest of the solution in the small beaker to make sure you really DID put sugar, starch, protein, and salt into your “cell.” a. Squirt enough of the solution from the small beaker in to each of four test tubes to fill them about 1/3 full. i. Add about the same amount of benedicts to the first test tube (so it is now 2/3 full) and put it in a hot water bath. ii. Add a drop or two of iodine to the second test tube. Do NOT heat it! iii. Add about a pipette-full of Biuret A to the third test tube. Shake it. Then add Biuret B (the same amount as Biuret A). Do NOT heat it! iv. Add a few drops of silver nitrate to the fourth tube. DO NOT HEAT IT! b. Record what was in the small cup, and thus originally in your “cell,” to begin with, in your data chart. c. Clean out your test tubes using the small test tube brush. d. Go back to your desks. e. At the end of the period, remove four samples of the water your “cell” was sitting in and squirt each into a different test tube. Test one for sugar, one for starch, one for protein, and one for salt. Record your results in the data chart. Data Indicator Original color of the indicator Before Diffusion Occurs Color the indicator + solution in small beaker turned Kind(s) of molecules that must be present in the small beaker (and thus in the “cell”) based on the color After Diffusion Occurs Color the indicator + solution from the large beaker of water turned. Benedicts Iodine Biuret Silver Nitrate Conclusions 1. Which of the molecules tested are smaller than the pores in a cell membrane? A. How do you know? Kind(s) of molecules that must be present in the larger beaker of water. 2. Which of the molecules tested are larger than the pores in a cell membrane? A. How do you know? 3. Based on this difference, which of the following molecules would you expect to be able to diffuse readily through a cell membrane? Circle all that apply: NaCl fat H2O cellulose KCl glycogen Why? 4. How is the “snake skin” similar to a real cell membrane? A. How is it different? 5. What do you think would have happened if you had placed the indicator iodine outside the dialysis membrane, in the cup of water, from the START of the investigation? Why? 6. What must happen to molecules like starch and protein if they are to be used by cells? 7. What do you predict would happen if we put starch and amylase inside the dialysis tube and iodine outside the dialysis tube? (NOTE: Amylase is an enzyme that digests starch.) Why? 8. What might be one reason glucose is a good food for “quick energy” in comparison to starches? 9. Dialysis tubing is used in labs a LOT to separate chemicals. For instance, if I want to remove, salts from a venom sample (venom is made of large proteins), I put the venom in a dialysis tube, suspend the tube in a beaker of water, and let water from a faucet run into the beaker and overflow into a drain for several hours. Why couldn’t I remove all the salts if I let the tube sit in standing water instead of letting water run over it? 10. People whose kidneys are not functioning can be saved if they go on a dialysis machine. A dialysis machine uses dialysis membranes to separate “bad” and toxic molecules from the blood. Blood from the patient is run across the dialysis membranes in one direction and a solution that is the correct concentration of chemicals runs in the opposite direction. Why don’t the blood and solution run in the same direction? (Your answer will be similar to the answer to question #9).