Sucrose is not a reducing sugar, at all. To detect it via any conventional REDOX assay (e.g. DNS (dinitrosalicylic acid and Rochelle salt) you would
need to invert it, first (cleave into one mole equivalent each of glucose and fructose). This can be done with invertase enzyme (yeast make their own
in-situ) or by heating with acid (see Clerget procedure). Fructose isn't a reducing sugar, either--but, most assays are alkaline which isomerizes it
to glucose/mannose, which are reducing and, hence, detectable.
"Fermentable" is a vague term. The capacity of a given microorganism to consume a particular carbohydrate (or, glycerol, lactate, mannitol, for that
matter) depends on its genetic coding for carbohydrate transporters/metabolism. Some bugs can eat xylose, some cannot, for example. Ergo, the
definition of "fermentable" depends on the bug you want to use.
So, simple maceration with water, filter, measure the brix (refractometer). Weigh an aliquot, invert with acid or invertase, and titrate for reducing
sugar (Lane-Eynon boiling titration, Fehling's reagent) or run a DNS assay which can be compared with standards visually or, better, with a
vis-spectrophotometer, the original method, for urine, works very well. I use it all the time for quick enzyme kinetics (there have been some
improvements, but the old assay is simple and effective): http://www.jbc.org/content/47/1/5.full.pdf
Because many higher carbohydrate polymers and oligos also have a reducing end, it might be a good idea to first ppt your aqueous extract with 70%
EtOH. The EtOH should be removed prior to assay: http://www.rroij.com/open-access/effect-of-ethyl-alcohol-on-...
I think you may have a hard time getting a decent S/N with the straight extract (most lawn-type grasses don't make very much sugar), so you might need
to concentrate the extract (avoid heat and alkaline pH).
I run HPAEC-PAD (high pressure anion exchange chromatography with pulsed amperometric detection) for this kind of thing, so sensitivity is not an
issue.
Hmm, I might need to extract some grass and see if I get anything, now.
O3
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