Acids and bases play several important roles in biology. The pH of a biological system can significantly impact the function of biological molecules, including enzymes, proteins, and nucleic acids. For example, enzymes have optimal pH ranges for their activity, and changes in pH can denature or alter their structure, affecting their function. Acids and bases also play a crucial role in cellular signaling and communication. The pH of the extracellular fluid around cells can influence the activity of ion channels, which are essential for cellular communication and signaling.

Acids

An acid is a substance that releases hydrogen ions (H+) in solution. Because an atom of hydrogen has just one proton and one electron, a positively charged hydrogen ion is simply a proton. This solitary proton is highly likely to participate in chemical reactions. Strong acids are compounds that release all of their H+ in solution; that is, they ionize completely. Hydrochloric acid (HCl), which is released from cells in the lining of the stomach, is a strong acid because it releases all of its H+ in the stomach's watery environment. This strong acid helps in digestion and kills ingested microbes. Weak acids do not ionize completely; that is, some of their hydrogen ions remain bonded within a compound in solution. An example of a weak acid is vinegar or acetic acid.

Bases

A base is a substance that releases hydroxyl ions (OH-) in solution or one that accepts H+ already present in solution. The hydroxyl ions (also known as hydroxide ions) or other basic substances combine with H+ present to form a water molecule, thereby removing H+ and reducing the solution's acidity. Food mixed with hydrochloric acid from the stomach would burn the small intestine, the next portion of the digestive tract after the stomach, if it were not for the release of bicarbonate (HCO3-), a weak base that attracts H+. Bicarbonate accepts some of the H+ protons, thereby reducing the acidity of the solution.

Neutralization reactions

A neutralization reaction is a specific type of acid-base reaction in which the reactants are an acid and a base (but not water), and the products are often salt and water.

Consider what happens when a typical antacid such as milk of magnesia (an aqueous suspension of solid Mg(OH)2) is ingested to ease symptoms associated with excess stomach acid (HCl). In addition to water, this reaction produces a salt, magnesium chloride. Such reactions are of central importance to numerous natural and technological processes, ranging from the chemical transformations that take place within cells and the lakes and oceans to the industrial-scale production of fertilizers, pharmaceuticals, and other substances essential to society.

This text is adapted from Opentsax, Anatomy, and Physiology 2e, Section 2.4 Inorganic Compounds Essential to Human Functioning and Opentsax, Chemistry Atoms First 2e, 7.2 Classifying Chemical Reactions

Tags
AcidsBasesPHBiological SystemsEnzymesProteinsNucleic AcidsCellular SignalingHydrogen IonsHydroxyl IonsNeutralization ReactionsStrong AcidsWeak AcidsHydrochloric AcidBicarbonateAntacidMagnesium Chloride

来自章节 3:

article

Now Playing

3.21 : Acids, Bases and Neutralization Reactions

Fundamentals of Chemistry

5.4K Views

article

3.1 : 什么是物质?

Fundamentals of Chemistry

8.7K Views

article

3.2 : 元素周期表和有机元素

Fundamentals of Chemistry

7.6K Views

article

3.3 : 原子结构

Fundamentals of Chemistry

9.8K Views

article

3.4 : 化学符号

Fundamentals of Chemistry

7.1K Views

article

3.5 : 原子序数和质量数

Fundamentals of Chemistry

8.2K Views

article

3.6 : 原子量

Fundamentals of Chemistry

7.8K Views

article

3.7 : 同位素和放射性同位素

Fundamentals of Chemistry

7.7K Views

article

3.8 : 电子行为

Fundamentals of Chemistry

7.1K Views

article

3.9 : 化学键简介

Fundamentals of Chemistry

7.1K Views

article

3.10 : 离子键

Fundamentals of Chemistry

6.1K Views

article

3.11 : 共价键

Fundamentals of Chemistry

6.6K Views

article

3.12 : 氢键

Fundamentals of Chemistry

7.2K Views

article

3.13 : 离子、分子和化合物

Fundamentals of Chemistry

7.2K Views

article

3.14 : 物质状态

Fundamentals of Chemistry

963 Views

See More

JoVE Logo

政策

使用条款

隐私

科研

教育

关于 JoVE

版权所属 © 2025 MyJoVE 公司版权所有,本公司不涉及任何医疗业务和医疗服务。