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Lecture Highlights

Water/Acids

1. To understand biochemistry, it is essential to understand water and the alterations of it (pH, for
example) that affect biological molecules.
2. Water is a bent molecule. Electrons are not shared equally by oxygen and the hydrogens,
resulting in the hydrogens having a partial positive charge and the oxygen having a partial
negative charge. These partial charges give rise to hydrogen bonds. Note that the attraction of a
nucleus for electrons is measured by electronegativity. The higher the electronegativity, the
stronger the attraction for electrons.
3. Ionic (polar) compounds will be pulled apart in water. We say that they dissolve. In this case,
the ions (charged molecules, such as K+) are surrounded by the correspondingly opposite partial
charge of the water molecule. Thus, K+ is most closely associated with the oxygen component of
the water molecule since the oxygen is the most negatively charged. This is an example of an
ion-dipole interaction and is very common in water.
4. Bond energies are measures of the amount of energy it takes to break a bond. Covalent bonds
(such as those between oxygen and hydrogen in water) are extraordinarily strong compared to
hydrogen bonds (by a factor of about 20). Nonetheless, hydrogen bonds contribute significantly
to the properties of water and biological molecules.
5. We use the term hydrophilic to refer to compounds that are soluble in water and hydrophobic
to refer to compounds that are not soluble in water. The term 'amphiphilic' or amphipathic is used
to refer to compounds that have parts of them that 'like' water and parts of them that repel water.
Soaps are a perfect example of an amphiphilic compound. We shall see later that the lipids in
membranes are amphiphilic.
6. Many biological compounds are hydrophilic. Examples include sugars, amino acids, nucleic
acids, and most proteins. Fat is the predominant hydrophobic compound found in cells. Fatty
acids (which are components of fats) are amphiphilic.
7. Hydrogen bonds can occur between many different molecules. All it takes is a hydrogen with a
partial positive charges and a nearby molecule with a partial negative charge.
8. Hydrogen bonds are responsible for giving water its extremely high melting and boiling points
for a molecule of its small molecular weight.
9. In water, molecules like acids can donate protons (H+) to the solution. This has a drastic effect
on the properties of water. On the other side, bases (like hydroxides) can accept protons found in
water. The proton concentration is therefore very critical. We measure the proton concentration
using a term called pH.
10. Water ionizes (loses a proton) at a very low rate. In pure water, the rate is one ionization per
10 million water molecules. Water is therefore a weak acid (acids are compounds that lose
protons).
11. By contrast, HCl (hydrochloric acid) is a strong acid. If you put 10 million molecules of HCl in
water, all 10 million molecules will dissociate into H+ and Cl- ions.
12. Many acids we find in cells are weak acids. Examples include acetic acid, which is a stronger
acid than water, but a weaker acid than HCl. When we describe weak acids, we designate them
by the letters HA. When the acid loses a proton, we refer to what is left as A-. The difference
between HA and A- is clearly the proton that is lost. We refer therefore to HA as the ACID and A-
as the SALT. I will avoid using the term BASE wherever I can in this class.
13. If one has an acid that loses one proton per 1000 molecules, it is a stronger acid than one
that loses one proton per 100,000 molecules.
14. The Henderson-Hasselbalch equation (pH = pKa + log [A-]/[HA] (where A- is what I called the
'salt' and HA is the acid) allows one to measure the pH if one knows the pKa and the amount of
salt and acid. It also allows one to determine the amount of salt and acid if one knows the pH and
pKa.

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