Title: Weak Chemical Interactions
1Weak Chemical Interactions
Weak chemical interactions or non-covalent bonds
are key to life They can form and break with
minimal energy costs They allow for very dynamic
systems as observed in living organisms
- nearly all of the interactions
between macromolecules in the cell are highly
dynamic
2Covalent Bonds
The most stable bond type involves electron
sharing H C N P O S outer shell
electrons Each type of atom forms a
characteristic number of covalent bonds with
other atoms shortest bond lengths Covalent
bonds are strong and require a lot of energy to
break thermal energy at 25o (i.e. in cell) is 1
kcal/mol C-C bond requires 83 kcal/mol to
break
3Figure 2.1 bond energies
most biologically relevant covalent bonds
all biologically relevant noncovalent bonds
4Non-covalent Bonds
Much weaker than covalent bonds - these bonds
break and reform at Room Temperature
(RT) Transient Bonds - however, cumulatively
they are very effective e.g. ? helix for proteins
and double helix for DNA
5Figure 2.2 non-covalent interactions
6Non-covalent Bonds forces involved
- Charge Charge Interactions
- - electrostatic interactions between a pair of
charges - - in a vacuum (or in a crystal ) very strong
interactions - as strong as some covalent bonds.
Force between a pair of charges (q1 and q2,
separated by distance r)
Coulombs law
If F is , corresponds to repulsion (qs have same
charge)
If F is -, corresponds to attraction (qs have
different charge)
7Charge-charge interactions within a cell
-In a cell, charges are surrounded by dielectric
medium- screens charges from one another. -much
weaker interaction than that seen in vacuum
Dielectric Constant
- higher ? weaker force between particles
Dielectric constants H2O 80 organic
solvents 1-10
8Charge-charge interactions energy of interaction
Energy of Interaction (U) -energy required to
separate two charged particles from distance r to
infinite distance
Interaction/repulsion between charges is
nondirectional varies linearly with distance (as
opposed to some of the other interactions)
(as r becomes very large, U approaches zero)
9Dipole interactions-permanent and induced
- Molecules with no net charge but with asymmetric
distribution of charge (eg. CO) - Polar (permanent dipole)
- Dipole moment m
- expresses a molecules polarity
- A vector always directed towards the positive
charge q - Molecules with large dipole moments are highly
polar
10Dipole moments
? qx
?, dipole moment q, charge (or fractional
charges) x, distance between charges
Dipole moment
glycine
O
C
0.12
q-
q
0
O
O
C
q
q-
q-
Equal in magnitude but opposite direction, cancel
each other out
Because the distance between charges is so great
q-
O
1.83
H
H
q
q
11Dipole interactions
- Charge-dipole sometimes
- Dipole-dipole called
- Charge-induced dipole van der Waals
- Dipole-induced dipole attractions
Interactions involving permanent dipoles depend
on the orientation of the dipole and they are
shorter range than charge-charge
interactions. Some dipoles are induced in
polarizable molecules
12Induced Dipoles
- electric fields can induce a dipole in a
molecule which does not have a dipole - a
molecule in which a dipole can be induced is said
to be polarizable - Interactions of polarizable
molecules are called induced dipole interactions.
They are even shorter range than permanent
dipole interactions
Molecules with neither a net charge or permanent
dipole moment can attract one another if close
enough. This is due to the fluctuations in the
electronic charge distribution - When two
molecules approach to a very close distance, they
synchronize their charge fluctuations so as to
give a net attractive force Such mutual dipole
induction is called Dispersion Forces. Also
known as van der Waals attractions
13van der Waals repulsion
When molecules or atoms come so close together
their outer electron orbitals begin to overlap,
there is a mutual repulsion This repulsion
increases very rapidly as the distance between
centers (r) decreases. This repulsive force
increases so drastically at small distances it
acts as a wall, effectively barring approach
closer than distance rv - defines the so-called
van der Waals radius. The balance between these
forces is important in biology- mediate binding
of enzymes with substrates and antibody-antigen
interactions and base stacking in DNA.
14Figure 2.6 van der Waals forces
Table 2.2
van der Waals radii
rv
Note Covalently and H-bonded atoms are closer
than the van der Waals distance
15Hydrogen Bonds
VERY important in biochemistry. An interaction
between a covalently bonded hydrogen atom on a
donor group and a pair of non-bonded electrons on
an acceptor group.
Shares features with covalent and non-covalent
interactions
N-H . . . OC, predict H-O distance of 0.26 nm
actually 0.19 nm
16Hydrogen bonds in protein structure
17Water
water is actually a rather remarkable
chemical! Comparing water with chemicals of
similar Molecular Weight, reveals several obvious
differences
Why is water unique?
-Strong Hydrogen Bonding
18Structure of Water
ice
Flickering cluster
water
19Sphere of hydration
Sphere of Hydration
- Sphere of hydration surrounding proteins is
important high concentrations of certain salts
(e.g., ammonium sulfate) make the proteins become
less soluble and precipitate
20Water can also dissolve a wide variety of polar
molecules, via dipole-dipole interactions and/or
Hydrogen bonding.
21Hydrogen Bond Exchange
Figure 2.11
Probably helps to dissolve macromolecules
22Hydrophobic Interaction
Hydrophobic, water-fearing Hydrophilic, water-lovi
ng
Amphipathic, both H-philic and H-phobic, e.g.,
lipids
- NOT a true force.
- The consequence of the energy needed to insert a
non-polar molecule into water. - water clatherate structure formed
- hydrogen bonds broken
- non-polar molecules form van der Waals
interactions between each other
23Hydrophobic molecules in aqueous solution
-molecules that cannot form hydrogen bonds
have limited solubility in water ie. non-polar,
non-ionic substances that cannot form H bonds
(eg. hydrocarbons)
When hydrophobic molecules dissolve in water,
ice-like Clathrate structures cage the
molecules highly ordered, so not energetically
favoured Less energy is required to encage 2
molecules than each alone-so they tend to cluster
and form aggregates
24Amphipathic molecules simultaneously exhibit
hydrophilic and hydrophobic properties.
- Includes phospholipids, fatty acids and
detergents - Form monolayers, micelles or bilayer vesicles
- Basis of cellular membrane bilayers
- Polar or ionic head groups become hydrated
Hydrophilic head groups
Hydrophobic tail groups
fatty acid detergent
25Review ionic equilibria equations and terms- be
able to solve simple problems (Matthews et al. pp
41-47)
pH -log H Ka H A-/HA pKa -log Ka
pH pKa log (A-/HA) (Henderson-Hasselbalch
equation) pI isoelectric point
26Practice Problems ( not to be handed in) Most of
these questions should be chemistry
review! Matthews 3rd edition- p. 51, problems
2, 3, 8, 11 p. 80, problems 5a, 7a, 7b The
answers are in the back of the text.