Action of catalase and MnO2 on hydrogen peroxide

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on an experiment comparing the effects of catalase, found in liver, and manganese dioxide on hydrogen peroxide. The experiment involves four test tubes, each containing hydrogen peroxide with different substances. Test tube A, with fresh liver, is expected to produce oxygen gas due to the action of the enzyme catalase. In contrast, test tube B, containing boiled liver, should show no reaction because boiling denatures the enzyme, rendering it inactive. Test tubes C and D contain manganese dioxide, which acts as an inorganic catalyst and should also produce oxygen gas, unaffected by boiling. The discussion emphasizes the importance of enzyme stability and the contrasting roles of organic enzymes versus inorganic catalysts in breaking down hydrogen peroxide. Observations from the experiment should confirm that tubes A, C, and D produce a positive reaction, indicated by the ignition of a glowing splinter, while tube B does not. The conversation also hints at the need for students to understand the effects of temperature on enzyme activity and the nature of catalysts.
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can anyone give some comments or inferential analysis to the research presented below? thank you :D some info and answers to the topic questions would be nice to hear too!

"To compare the action of catalase and manganese dioxide on hydrogen peroxide."


1. Label 4 test-tubes A, B, C and D.
2. To each tube add 5cm3 of hydrogen peroxide.
3. Prepare the contents of the 4 tubes as shown in the table below. For each tube record the observations. Test any gas given off with a glowing splinter.

TEST TUBE AND CONTENTS:

A. 5cm3 hydrogen peroxide solution + 1 small pieace of fresh liver

B. 5cm3 hydrogen peroxide solution + 1 small piece of boiled liver (Boil the liver for 10 minutes and cool before use.)

C. 5cm3 hydrogen peroxide + a little manganese (IV) oxide

D. 5cm3 hydrogen peroxide solution + a little boiled manganese dioxode (The manganese dioxide has been boiled and cooled before use.)

4. What type of substance is in the liver which could bring about the reaction in tube A?

5. How do you account for your observation in tube B?

6. From your observation on D, what can you conclude about manganese (IV) oxide?

7.Repeat experiments A and B using a piece of potato tuber.

:smile:
 
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hikki_pop said:
4. What type of substance is in the liver which could bring about the reaction in tube A?

What enzyme is present in the liver? It is clearly stated in you title.

hikki_pop said:
5. How do you account for your observation in tube B?

The reaction should be negative.
What happen to proteins when you heat it up? What would be the effect on an enzyme? Therefore the enzyme is heat stable or labile?

hikki_pop said:
6. From your observation on D, what can you conclude about manganese (IV) oxide?

Manganese dioxide is an inorganic catalyst (but not an enzyme) for the breaking down of hydrogen peroxide. Reaction C & D have the same reaction. Therefore manganese oxide is the opposite of catalase

hikki_pop said:
7.Repeat experiments A and B using a piece of potato tuber.
It should give the same reaction as with the liver piece. Why? same enzyme is present in the potato.


http://www.google.ca/search?q=cache:SiNuE31QS-kJ:www.uq.edu.au/_School_Science_Lessons/topic17.html+compare+action+catalase+%22manganese+dioxide%22+%22hydrogen+peroxide%22&hl=en
 
Have you performed this experiment yet? You didn't show your data.
 
nope we didn't do it yet...
 
Did your manual or instructor specify that catalase in present in both the liver and in potato tubers? If not, ian probably shouldn't have given that away. Have you learned yet about the effects of temperature on the activity of enzymes and on inorganic catalysts? I'm going to assume you have, but if not, ian kind of gave that one away as well. Just to reiterate the point, boiling the liver will denature the enzyme (as it would any protein), and without the proper conformation for its active site, the enzyme will cease to function. Boiling the manganese dioxide, on the other hand, will have no effect and that reaction should proceed as if you had never boiled the catalyst.

I believe you are breaking down hydrogen peroxide into water and elemental oxygen, so that positive reactions will give off oxygen gas, which will ignite your glowing splinter. In short, the splinter should light up when placed over tubes A, C, and D, but not when placed over tube B. Now, just to review, can you tell me why this is and give your expected answers for questions 4 -7 (without directly quoting ian or myself)?
 
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