Teach
Biology
Chemistry
Investigating blood types
In this experiment, simple liquids that
mimic blood are used to demonstrate
blood typing.
of Nicola Graf
www.scienceinschool.org
courtesy
be used in lessons, for a science club
or as part of a forensic science day for
students of many ages.
Image courtesy of Magdalena Wajrak
he topic of blood types is often
taught in school science lessons
but experimenting with real blood
may not be possible for many good
reasonsbecause of the concerns of
parents, the need for comprehensive
risk assessments to prevent infection
or the transmission of blood-borne
disease, or the reluctance of students
to use their own blood.
In this practical activity, simple
chemical solutions are used to
simulate blood types. The activity can
Image
By Tim Harrison
The science of blood
Blood is a sticky red fluid containing
several kinds of cell suspended in
a watery liquid called plasma: red
blood cells, white blood cells and
platelets (figure 1). Many chemicals
are also suspended or dissolved in the
plasma, including proteins, sugars,
fats, salts, enzymes and gases. Each
persons blood has certain inherited
D
E
Figure 1: Photomicrograph of a human
blood smear showing red blood cells (A)
platelets (B) and white blood cells (C, D
and E).
Science in School I Issue 32 : Summer 2015 I 33
Anti-B agglutinin +
blood: clumping
Blood type
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
AB
No
Yes
No
No
Image courtesy of Magdalena Wajrak
Anti-A agglutinin +
blood: clumping
Table 1: Deducing ABO blood type using antigens
34
I Science in School I Issue 32 : Summer 2015
ABO blood typing experiment
Safety note: Wear safety glasses and
gloves. See also the general safety note
on the Science in School website.
Using the dimple tray
Biology
Chemistry
Blood
Immunology
Agglutination reactions
Displacement reactions
Ages 1419
This interesting practical activity addresses a basic topic of biology:
blood types. Although the theory may be familiar to students, experiments on blood are normally avoided for reasons explained by the
author. This, however, is an easy simulation to try in the laboratory
using a simple chemical reaction.
The subject of this article could be related to other important topics
such as immunology in biology, displacement reactions in chemistry,
and even civil rights in ethics. The experiment could also be useful for
awakening students interest in the need to investigate new materials
and technologies that allow us to make safer and faster transfusions.
Suitable comprehension questions could include:
1) What is the importance of knowing your blood type?
2) Why does clumping occur? What is the relationship between
antigen and antibody?
3) Do you know an example of blood typing other than ABO?
REVIEW
characteristics that distinguish it from
the blood of other people.
Until the 1980s, blood was primarily
differentiated by ABO blood typing,
which relies on the presence of three
substances on the outside of red blood
cells, called antigens. Although for
forensic purposes, this technique has
since been replaced by other methods
such as DNA fingerprinting, for
clinical purposes, ABO blood typing
is still used before giving someone
a blood transfusion to prevent
complications such as rejection.
The presence or absence of A and B
antigens on red blood cells determines
a persons ABO blood type. This leads
to the identification of four main
blood types: A, B, AB (when both
antigens are present) and O (when
neither antigen is present), as shown
in figure 2. A third important blood
antigen is the Rhesus (Rh) factor, or D
antigen. People with the D antigen are
Rh positive, and those who lack it are
Rh negative.
In order to type a persons blood,
antibodies (called agglutinins and
sometimes referred to as antiserums)
are added to a few drops of blood.
These agglutinins bind to the antigens
on the surface of the red blood cells,
causing the cells to aggregate or
clump. If clumping occurs in a blood
sample, then that associated antigen is
present. Once all antigens have been
tested, the blood type can be deduced
(table 1).
4) What is the difference between agglutination and displacement
reactions?
5) Why is it important to investigate new sources of universal donor
blood?
Ana Molina, IES Gil y Carrasco, Ponferrada, Spain
www.scienceinschool.org
Teach
Image courtesy of Magdalena Wajrak
Image courtesy of Magdalena Wajrak
Materials
Two spotting tiles (dimple trays)
Two pipettes, one for each blood
sample
2.0 mol dm
hydrochloric acid
solution in a dropping bottle
labelled Anti-A
-3
+ anti-A
O
Biology
Each group will need:
AB
+ anti-B
AB
Chemistry
2.0 mol dm
sulfuric acid solution
in a dropping bottle labelled Anti-B
-3
Identified blood samples
(aqueous solutions made thicker
with glycerol and dyed with food
colouring to resemble blood),
labelled by blood type:
Figure 2: Blood samples on a dimple tray
Recording observations
O = distilled water
A = 0.1 mol dm-3 silver nitrate
solution
B = 0.1 mol dm-3 barium nitrate
solution
AB = a 50:50 mixture of 0.1 mol
dm-3 silver nitrate and barium
nitrate solutions
Unidentified blood samples, made
from the same solutions as the
identified blood samples, labelled
victim 1, victim 2, etc.
Group A
Group B
Group AB
Group O
Anti-B
Anti-A
None
Anti-A and anti-A
B antigen
A and B antigens
Red blood
cell type
Antibodies in
plasma
Procedure
Explain the scenario to your
students: there has been an accident
and you need to know the ABO blood
type of the victims before they can
be given blood transfusions. It is the
students job to use the blood samples
Antigens in red
blood cells
A antigen
None
Image courtesy of InvictaHOG ; image source: Wikimedia Commons
ABO blood typing
BACKGROUND
More types of artificial blood
The need to identify the blood type of patients before
blood transfusion may soon be a thing of the past. Recently, UK-based researchers at the University of Edinburgh announced that they had made type O negative
red blood cells from stem cells. If scaled up successfully, this method could lead to a new source of universal donor blood, and there are plans for a small-scale
clinical trial in 2016.
www.scienceinschool.org
Furthermore, researchers are developing products
based on haemoglobin (the oxygen-carrying protein in
blood), for example in a polymerised and powdered
form, that can be stored for months at room temperature, unlike blood, which has to be refrigerated.
Science in School I Issue 32 : Summer 2015 I 35
and work out the type of blood each
victim has.
1. Using a clean pipette, put one drop
of one of the identified blood samples into each of the first wells of
the first two rows of your dimple
tile. Complete the rows with the
other blood samples, as shown in
figure 2.
2. Add a drop of anti-A antiserum to
each dimple in the first row and
record your observations in table
2. If youre not sure of a result, add
another drop of anti-A antiserum.
3. Add a drop of anti-B antiserum
to each dimple in the second row
and record your observations, also
in table 2. If youre not sure of a
result, add another drop of anti-B
antiserum.
6. Use your results to assign the correct blood type to each victim
About what happens
These tests mimic how different
blood types react with agglutinins, by
using simple chemistry. With older
students you may wish to discuss this
chemistry, pointing out the differences
between the antibody-antigen reaction
which is being modelled and the
simple displacement reaction that is
actually happening.
In this experiment, instead of
clumping blood cells, the (white)
precipitates make the solutions clump
in the spotting tiles.
Barium nitrate(aq) + sulfuric
acid(aq) barium sulfate(s) +
nitric acid(aq)
4. Use your results to conclude how
each blood type (O, A, B and AB)
reacts to the antibodies.
5. Take a clean dimple tray and test
the victims blood using the same
method. Record your observations
in table 3.
Blood
type
Silver nitrate(aq) + hydrochloric
acid(aq) silver chloride(s) +
nitric acid(aq)
The clumps that form are dark red,
instead of white, because of the food
colouring present.
Observations with anti-A. Did
clumping occur?
Observations with anti-B. Did
clumping occur?
AB
O
Table 2: Record the clumping behaviour of the identified samples.
Observations with
anti-A. Did clumping
occur?
Observations with
anti-B. Did clumping
occur?
Blood type
1
2
3
4
Table 3: Test the unidentified blood samples (found at the accident scene).
36
Science in School I Issue 32 : Summer 2015
This activity was developed by
Magdalena Wajrak of Edith Cowan
University in Perth, Australia. The
solutions used in this version came
from a group of science technicians
from the Association of Science
Technicians in Independent Schools in
Western Australia (LABNETWEST)w1.
Web reference
w1 To learn more about LABNETWEST, see: http://labnetwest.
asu.au
Resources
While A, B, AB and O are the most
common blood types, there are
other rarer blood types, as this
article in Mosaic explores:
http://mosaicscience.com/story/
man-golden-blood
From the same website, why not
explore why we have blood types
at all? Visit: http://mosaicscience.
com/story/why-do-we-have-bloodtypes
For further Science in School articles
about forensic science projects, see:
Wallace-Mller K (2011) The DNA
detective game. Science in School
19: 30-35. www.scienceinschool.
org/2011/issue19/detective
Gardner G (2006) The detective
mystery: an interdisciplinary
foray into basic forensic science.
Science in School 3: 35-38.
www.scienceinschool.org/2006/
issue3/detective
_________________________________
Victim
Acknowledgement
Tim Harrison works at the
University of Bristol, as the school
teacher fellow at the School of
Chemistry. This is a position for a
secondary-school teacher that was
created to bridge the gap between
secondary schools and universities,
and to use the resources of the
School of Chemistry to promote
chemistry regionally, nationally and
internationally.
CC BY-NC-SA
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