Chapter 2 – Orientation for the Bio-Curious 25
The general field of study of carbon compounds is known as “organic chemistry,” to dif
ferentiate it from inorganic chemistry that involves noncarbon compounds, but also confus
ingly can include the study of the chemistry of pure carbon itself such as found in graphite,
graphene, and diamond. Biochemistry is largely a subset or organic chemistry concerned
primarily with carbon compounds occurring in biological matter (barring some inorganic
exceptions of certain metal ions). An important characteristic of biochemical compounds is
that although the catenated carbon chemistry confers stability, the bonds are still sufficiently
labile to be modified in the living organism to generate different chemical compounds during
the general process of metabolism (defined as the collection of all biochemical transform
ations in living organisms). This dynamic flexibility of chemistry is just as important as the
relative chemical stability of catenated carbon for biology; in other words, this stability occu
pies an optimum regime for life.
The chemicals of life, which not only permit efficient functioning of living matter during
the normal course of an organism’s life but also facilitate its own ultimate replication into
future generations of organisms through processes such as cellular growth, replication,
and division can be subdivided usefully into types mainly along the lines of their chemical
properties.
2.3.2 LIPIDS AND FATTY ACIDS
By chemically linking a small alcohol-type molecule called “glycerol” with a type of carbon-
based acid that contain typically 20 carbon atoms, called “fatty acids,” fats, also known as
lipids, are formed, with each glycerol molecule in principle having up to three sites for
available fatty acids to bind. In the cell, however, one or sometimes two of these three
available binding sites are often occupied by an electrically polar molecule such as cho
line or similar and/or to charged phosphate groups, to form phospholipids (Figure 2.3a).
These impart a key physical feature of being amphiphilic, which means possessing both
hydrophobic, or water-repelling properties (through the fatty acid “tail”), and hydrophilic,
or water-attracting properties (through the polar “head” groups of the choline and/or
charged phosphate).
This property confers an ability for stable structures to form via self-assembly in which
the head groups orientate to form electrostatic links to surrounding electrically polar water
molecules, while the corresponding tail groups form a buried hydrophobic core. Such
stable structures include at their simplest globular micelles, but more important biological
structures can be formed if the phospholipids orient to form a bilayer, that is, where two
layers of phospholipids form in effect as a mirror image sandwich in which the tails are at
the sandwich center and the polar head groups on the outside above and below (Figure 2.3b).
Phospholipid bilayers constitute the primary boundary structure to cells in that they confer
an ability to stably compartmentalize biological matter within a liquid water phase, for
example, to form spherical vesicles or liposomes (Figure 2.4a) inside cells. Importantly, they
form smaller organelles inside the cells such as the cell nucleus, for exporting molecular
components generated inside the cell to the outside world, and, most importantly, for forming
the primary boundary structure around the outside of all known cells, of the cell membrane,
which arguably is a larger length scale version of a liposome but including several additional
nonphospholipid components (Figure 2.4b).
A phospholipid bilayer constitutes a large free energy barrier to the passage of a single
molecule of water. Modeling the bilayer as a dielectric indicates that the electrical permit
tivity of the hydrophobic core is 5–10 times that of air, indicating that the free energy
change, ΔG, per water molecule required to spontaneously translocate across the bilayer
is equivalent to ~65 kBT, one to two orders of magnitude above the characteristic thermal
energy scale of the surrounding water solvent reservoir. This suggests a likelihood for the
process to occur given by the Boltzmann factor of exp(−ΔG/kBT), or ~10−28. Although gases
such as oxygen, carbon dioxide, and nitrogen can diffuse in the phospholipid bilayer, it can
be thought of as being practically impermeable to water. Water, and molecules solvated in