Water is not just a passive backdrop for biochemistry — it is an active participant in virtually every reaction that keeps you alive. Understanding how water behaves as a solvent, how electrolytes distribute across compartments, how pH is defended, and how membranes control ionic traffic gives you the mechanistic foundation to reason through acid-base disorders, dehydration syndromes, and electrolyte emergencies on the wards. This post ties all four threads together.
1 Water as a Biological Solvent
Think of water as the ultimate biochemical negotiator. Its structure — a bent molecule with two O–H bonds at an angle of approximately 104.5° — creates a permanent electric dipole. The oxygen end is electron-rich and slightly negative; the hydrogen ends are slightly positive. This polarity means water molecules interact with each other and with solutes through hydrogen bonds: directional, non-covalent attractions that span roughly 0.27–0.31 nm between donor and acceptor atoms.
Each water molecule can form up to four hydrogen bonds simultaneously — two as a donor (through its two H atoms) and two as an acceptor (through the two lone pairs on oxygen). This creates a dynamic, three-dimensional hydrogen-bond network that gives water its extraordinary physical properties: a high boiling point relative to its molecular weight, a high heat capacity, and a high dielectric constant that weakens electrostatic attractions between ions and allows salts to dissolve readily.
Hydrogen bonds also play starring roles beyond solvent chemistry. They stabilize the α-helices and β-sheets of protein secondary structure, hold together the two strands of the DNA double helix, and maintain the ordered structure of lipid bilayer headgroups. In terms of energy, they occupy a middle tier — weaker than covalent bonds, yet far more robust than van der Waals interactions — which is precisely what makes them so biologically useful: strong enough to confer structural stability, weak enough to be rapidly broken and reformed.
2 The Hydrophobic Effect and Why It Matters
Not everything dissolves in water. Nonpolar molecules — the aliphatic side chains of amino acids like valine, leucine, and isoleucine, or the hydrocarbon tails of fatty acids — cannot form hydrogen bonds with water. When they are forced into an aqueous environment, nearby water molecules reorganise into a more ordered shell around them, which carries an entropic cost. The system minimises this cost by clustering nonpolar groups together and away from water, an arrangement called the hydrophobic effect.
The hydrophobic effect is the dominant force behind three key biological structures: protein folding (nonpolar side chains bury in the interior, away from the aqueous cytosol), lipid bilayer assembly (fatty acid tails face inward, polar headgroups face the aqueous compartment), and micelle formation by detergents and bile salts. Importantly, this is an entropic phenomenon driven by the gain in freedom of water molecules when they no longer need to form ordered shells — the nonpolar groups do not “attract” each other so much as they are collectively pushed together by water’s preference for its own hydrogen-bonding network.
Many drugs are amphipathic — they have both hydrophilic and hydrophobic regions. The ionisation state of a weak acid or base at a given pH determines how much of the drug exists in its uncharged (membrane-permeable) versus charged (membrane-impermeable) form. A weak acid like aspirin (pKa ≈ 3.5) is mostly uncharged and lipid-soluble in the acidic stomach (pH ≈ 1.5), facilitating absorption. In contrast, at plasma pH 7.4, aspirin is predominantly dissociated, making it water-soluble and easily distributed. This is directly calculated using the Henderson–Hasselbalch equation.
3 pH, Acids, Bases, and the Henderson–Hasselbalch Equation
The pH of a solution quantifies its hydrogen-ion concentration on a logarithmic scale: pH = −log[H⁺]. A weak acid partially donates its proton, establishing an equilibrium between its acid form (HA) and its conjugate base (A⁻). The dissociation constant Ka describes this equilibrium: Ka = [H⁺][A⁻] / [HA]. Taking the negative logarithm of this relationship and rearranging yields the Henderson–Hasselbalch equation:
pH = pKa + log([A⁻] / [HA])
This equation has three immediately useful applications in medicine. First, it predicts the ionisation state of any weak acid or base at physiological pH. Second, it quantifies the ratio of bicarbonate to CO₂ needed to maintain blood pH at 7.4. Third, it explains drug absorption across membranes — only the uncharged form of a drug crosses lipid bilayers freely, so the pH on each side of a membrane determines how much drug accumulates there.
A buffer is any conjugate acid–base pair that resists pH change. Buffering capacity is maximal when pH equals pKa, and remains effective within approximately one pH unit on either side (the range pKa ± 1). Outside this range, the buffer is overwhelmed because one form of the pair has become essentially exhausted.
“pKa Plus log BASE over ACID”
pKa: the acid dissociation constant. Base/Acid: the ratio of conjugate base [A⁻] to acid [HA]. When pH = pKa, the ratio is 1:1 (log 1 = 0). When base > acid, pH > pKa. When acid > base, pH < pKa.
4 Physiological Buffers
No single buffer system operates in isolation in the body. The major players are selected because their pKa values fall within one unit of physiological pH (7.4), giving them meaningful buffering capacity under normal conditions.
| Buffer System | Components | pKa | Primary Location | Clinical Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bicarbonate / CO₂ | HCO₃⁻ / H₂CO₃ (CO₂) | 6.1 (effective 6.35) | Blood plasma | Respiratory & renal regulation; primary ECF buffer |
| Phosphate | H₂PO₄⁻ / HPO₄²⁻ | 6.82 | Cytosol, urine | Major intracellular buffer; urinary buffering |
| Proteins / Histidine | –NH₃⁺ / –NH₂ side chains | ~6–8 (varies) | Plasma, cells | Haemoglobin; albumin; large buffering capacity in blood |
| Amino acids | α-COOH / α-NH₃⁺ groups | 2.3 / 9.1 (Ala) | Cytosol | Intracellular buffering; zwitterion behaviour |
The bicarbonate buffer system is uniquely powerful not because its pKa is closest to 7.4, but because it is open — CO₂ is continuously removed by the lungs and HCO₃⁻ is regulated by the kidneys. This means the body can shift the ratio [HCO₃⁻]/[CO₂] far more effectively than a closed chemical system, allowing correction of acid-base disturbances through respiration and renal excretion. The Henderson–Hasselbalch equation applied to this system is: pH = 6.1 + log([HCO₃⁻] / [0.03 × pCO₂]).
Respiratory compensation: Increased CO₂ (↑pCO₂) drives pH down (respiratory acidosis). Hyperventilation blows off CO₂, raising pH. Hypoventilation retains CO₂, lowering pH.
Renal compensation: Kidneys reabsorb or excrete HCO₃⁻ and secrete H⁺ into urine. Renal compensation is slower (hours to days) than respiratory (minutes).
Metabolic acidosis: Loss of HCO₃⁻ (e.g. diarrhoea) or addition of non-volatile acid (e.g. lactic acidosis, diabetic ketoacidosis) lowers pH; compensated by hyperventilation (Kussmaul breathing).
5 Electrolyte Distribution: ICF vs ECF
The body’s ~42 litres of total body water (roughly 60% of body weight in an average male) are partitioned into two major compartments by the plasma membrane. About 28 litres reside intracellularly (ICF) and about 14 litres extracellularly (ECF), with the ECF further divided into interstitial fluid (~11 L) and plasma (~3 L).
The ionic compositions of these compartments are strikingly different, and this difference is not accidental — it is actively maintained and serves critical functions. The chart below captures the key contrasts:
| Ion | Intracellular (ICF) | Extracellular (ECF) | Primary Role |
|---|---|---|---|
| Na⁺ | ~10 mM (low) | ~140 mM (high) | ECF osmolality; action potential depolarisation |
| K⁺ | ~140 mM (high) | ~4 mM (low) | Resting membrane potential; ICF osmolality |
| Cl⁻ | ~4 mM (low) | ~104 mM (high) | Charge balance; HCl production in stomach |
| Ca²⁺ | ~0.0001 mM (very low) | ~1 mM (high) | Signal transduction; muscle contraction; coagulation |
| HPO₄²⁻ | ~50 mM (high) | ~1 mM (low) | Intracellular buffering; ATP synthesis |
| HCO₃⁻ | ~10 mM | ~24 mM | Extracellular buffering |
“K stays INside, Na stays OUT — like a bouncer at the cell door”
K⁺: the dominant intracellular cation (~140 mM inside vs ~4 mM outside). Na⁺: the dominant extracellular cation (~140 mM outside vs ~10 mM inside). The Na⁺/K⁺-ATPase is the “bouncer” — it pumps 3 Na⁺ out and 2 K⁺ in per ATP hydrolysed, maintaining these gradients continuously.
6 The Na⁺/K⁺-ATPase: The Master Ion Pump
The entire edifice of electrolyte homeostasis rests on a single protein: the Na⁺/K⁺-ATPase. This integral membrane protein belongs to the P-type ATPase family. Its structure comprises a 110 kDa α-subunit (which contains the ion-binding sites and is transiently phosphorylated during the transport cycle) and a 55 kDa β-subunit (whose precise function is less clear), arranged as a heterotetramer (αβ)₂.
The reaction it catalyses is energetically uphill for both ions being transported — both Na⁺ and K⁺ are moving against their electrochemical gradients — which is why ATP hydrolysis is absolutely required and no transport occurs without it:
3 Na⁺(ICF) + 2 K⁺(ECF) + ATP → 3 Na⁺(ECF) + 2 K⁺(ICF) + ADP + Pi
Notice the stoichiometry: three Na⁺ are expelled for every two K⁺ imported. This net export of one positive charge per cycle makes the pump electrogenic — it contributes directly to the negative resting membrane potential (approximately −60 mV in most neurons).
Na⁺ binding and phosphorylation Na⁺/K⁺-ATPase
3 Na⁺(ICF) + ATP → Enzyme-P (E1-P conformation) + ADP
Three intracellular Na⁺ ions bind to the α-subunit in the E1 conformation. ATP is hydrolysed, and the phosphate group is transiently covalently attached to an aspartyl residue, driving a conformational change.
Na⁺ release and K⁺ binding (E2-P conformation)
E1-P → E2-P: 3 Na⁺ expelled to ECF, 2 K⁺ bound from ECF
The conformational change from E1-P to E2-P reduces the pump’s affinity for Na⁺ and exposes the binding sites to the extracellular face. Na⁺ is released, and 2 K⁺ ions from the ECF bind in their place.
Dephosphorylation and K⁺ release
E2-P + H₂O → E1 + Pi: 2 K⁺ released to ICF
Hydrolysis of the aspartyl-phosphate bond returns the pump to the E1 conformation, which has low affinity for K⁺. The two K⁺ ions are released into the cytoplasm and the cycle is ready to repeat. One full cycle consumes one ATP and produces a net outward movement of one positive charge.
Cardiac glycosides such as digoxin (from Digitalis purpurea) and ouabain inhibit the Na⁺/K⁺-ATPase by binding to the extracellular face of the α-subunit when it is in the E2-P conformation. Inhibition raises intracellular Na⁺, which in turn reduces the Na⁺ gradient driving the Na⁺–Ca²⁺ exchanger (antiporter). Less Ca²⁺ is removed from the cell, so intracellular Ca²⁺ rises — increasing the force of cardiac muscle contraction (positive inotropy). This is the mechanism of action in congestive heart failure. Toxicity causes life-threatening hyperkalaemia and arrhythmias because pump inhibition allows K⁺ to leak out of all cells.
7 Osmosis, Tonicity, and Water Movement
Osmosis is the passive movement of water across a semipermeable membrane from a compartment of lower solute concentration to one of higher solute concentration. The driving force is the osmotic pressure — which is proportional to the total solute particle concentration (osmolarity, measured in mOsm/L). Water moves to equalise the chemical potential of water on both sides of the membrane.
Tonicity describes the effect of a solution on cell volume. An isotonic solution (e.g. normal saline, 0.9% NaCl ≈ 308 mOsm/L; 5% dextrose ≈ 278 mOsm/L) causes no net water movement and no change in cell volume. A hypotonic solution causes water to move into cells — they swell and may lyse (osmotic lysis), which is exactly the principle used in the laboratory to break open cells by placing them in pure water or dilute buffer. A hypertonic solution draws water out of cells, causing them to shrink (crenation).
Although water can cross lipid bilayers by simple diffusion (it is small enough and carries no full charge), this is often too slow for biological needs. Many tissues — especially renal tubules and red blood cells — express aquaporins, dedicated water channel proteins. Each aquaporin assembles as a tetramer of four identical 28 kDa protomers; within each protomer, a bundle of six membrane-spanning α-helices forms a water-selective channel through which molecules pass in single file. This pore allows single-file, rapid transit of water molecules while excluding ions and protons — a remarkable selectivity engineered by specific residues lining the channel. Aquaporin dysfunction is implicated in nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, where the collecting duct cannot concentrate urine despite adequate ADH.
“Hypo = Inflate, Hyper = Deflate, Iso = Sedate”
Hypotonic: water enters cell → swells/lyses (inflate). Hypertonic: water leaves cell → shrinks/crenates (deflate). Isotonic: no net movement → cell unchanged (sedate). Remember: osmosis follows solute, not water — water follows where the solutes are most concentrated.
8 Secondary Active Transport: Coupling Ion Gradients to Solute Uptake
The electrochemical Na⁺ gradient created by the Na⁺/K⁺-ATPase is not just there to set the membrane potential — it is harvested as an energy source to drive the uphill transport of other molecules. This is called secondary active transport (ion-driven active transport): the energy comes not directly from ATP, but from the thermodynamic tendency of Na⁺ to flow down its gradient back into the cell.
Transport proteins mediating this process fall into two families based on transport direction. In symport (cotransport), the solute and the driving ion move in the same direction across the membrane. In antiport, they move in opposite directions.
9 Oral Rehydration Therapy: Biochemistry Saves Lives
Oral rehydration therapy (ORT) is a masterpiece of applied biochemistry. Plain water administration fails in a patient with severe secretory diarrhoea because the diseased gut reverses its normal absorptive role, pouring Na⁺ and fluid into the lumen faster than they can be reclaimed, and without Na⁺ there is no osmotic gradient to pull water back into the circulation. The insight behind ORT is simple: glucose at the gut lumen activates the Na⁺/glucose symporter (SGLT-1) on the apical membrane of intestinal epithelial cells. Co-transport of Na⁺ with glucose restores luminal Na⁺ absorption; the resulting increase in intracellular Na⁺ and glucose raises the osmolality inside the epithelial cell relative to the lumen, and water follows passively by osmosis. Na⁺ is then pumped out of the cell at the basolateral face by the Na⁺/K⁺-ATPase, and glucose exits via GLUT-2, into the bloodstream. The net effect is vectorial water transport from gut lumen to blood — accomplished without any intravenous access.
In cholera, Vibrio cholerae toxin permanently activates adenylyl cyclase in intestinal epithelial cells, massively elevating cAMP and locking the CFTR Cl⁻ channel open. This drives large-scale Cl⁻ (and Na⁺ and water) secretion into the lumen — producing the pathognomonic “rice-water” stools. Critically, the Na⁺/glucose symporter pathway remains intact. ORT exploits this residual transporter to reverse the fluid losses, and has reduced cholera mortality from >50% to under 1% when applied promptly.
10 High-Yield Exam Summary
Water’s solvent power arises from its polarity and capacity to form 4 hydrogen bonds. Hydrogen bonds are stronger than van der Waals forces but weaker than covalent bonds; they are directional (donor–H···acceptor collinear).
Hydrophobic effect = entropy-driven. Nonpolar groups cluster together not because they attract each other, but to relieve the entropic cost of organising water around them. It drives protein folding, bilayer assembly, and micelle formation.
Henderson–Hasselbalch: pH = pKa + log([A⁻]/[HA]). Maximum buffering at pH = pKa. Effective range = pKa ± 1. Blood pH 7.4 maintained by bicarbonate system (pKa 6.1) because it is an open system — not because it has the closest pKa.
Na⁺/K⁺-ATPase: pumps 3 Na⁺ out, 2 K⁺ in per ATP. Electrogenic. Inhibited by cardiac glycosides (digoxin, ouabain). Na⁺ high outside; K⁺ high inside. This gradient powers all secondary active transport.
Tonicity: Hypo = cells swell/lyse. Hyper = cells crenate. Isotonic = no change. Aquaporins accelerate water flux (selective for water only; tetrameric 28 kDa subunits, 6 TM helices each).
SGLT-1 (apical, Na⁺/glucose symporter) vs GLUT-2 (basolateral, uniporter) — the two-transporter model of intestinal glucose absorption. ORT exploits SGLT-1 to rescue fluid absorption when Na⁺/K⁺-ATPase-dependent processes are overwhelmed.
Ca²⁺ gradient: cytosolic Ca²⁺ is kept at ~0.1 µM (10,000-fold lower than ECF 1 mM). Any rise in cytosolic Ca²⁺ triggers contraction, exocytosis, or apoptosis. Maintained by Ca²⁺-ATPase (SERCA) and Na⁺–Ca²⁺ exchanger.
Cystic fibrosis: defective CFTR (ABC transporter, Cl⁻ channel) → reduced Cl⁻ secretion → less water in airway lumen → thick mucus → recurrent infections. Most common mutation: ΔF508 (deletion of phenylalanine at position 508 → misfolding → degradation before reaching the membrane).
11 Mnemonic Summary Wall
“pKa Plus log BASE over ACID”
pKa: acid dissociation constant. Base/Acid: [A⁻]/[HA]. When pH = pKa, ratio is 1:1. When base > acid, pH > pKa. Maximum buffering capacity at pH = pKa; effective range pKa ± 1.
“K stays INside, Na stays OUT — like a bouncer at the cell door”
K⁺: dominant intracellular cation (~140 mM ICF vs ~4 mM ECF). Na⁺: dominant extracellular cation (~140 mM ECF vs ~10 mM ICF). The Na⁺/K⁺-ATPase maintains these gradients: 3 Na⁺ out, 2 K⁺ in per ATP.
“Hypo = Inflate, Hyper = Deflate, Iso = Sedate”
Hypotonic: water enters → cell swells/lyses. Hypertonic: water leaves → cell crenates. Isotonic: no net flux → cell volume unchanged. Osmosis follows the solutes — water moves to equalise concentrations.
“3 out, 2 in — spend 1 ATP, keep the gradient thin”
3 Na⁺: pumped out per cycle. 2 K⁺: pumped in per cycle. 1 ATP: consumed per cycle. Net result: electrogenic (1 positive charge exported per cycle), creating the negative resting membrane potential. Cardiac glycosides inhibit by blocking the E2-P state.
References
Hames, D., & Hooper, N. (2011). BIOS instant notes in biochemistry (3rd ed.). Taylor & Francis. [Sections B1, B2, E1, E3, E6]
Kennelly, P. J., Botham, K. M., McGuinness, O. P., Rodwell, V. W., & Weil, P. A. (2022). Harper’s illustrated biochemistry (32nd ed.). McGraw-Hill. [Chapters 1–2, 15]
The content on this page is intended for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, clinical judgement, or the guidance of a qualified healthcare provider. Always refer to current clinical guidelines and consult appropriate sources before applying information in a patient care setting.
