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H-bonds and DNA

Authors :
Stephen E. Harding
Source :
The Biochemist. 41:38-41
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Portland Press Ltd., 2019.

Abstract

Hydrogen bonds or ‘H-bonds’ are polar, non-covalent bonds or interactions between a hydrogen atom (H) attached to a more electronegative atom, such as oxygen (O) or nitrogen (N), which partially pulls the electron cloud away from the H, leaving it electropositive—with another electronegative atom, such as O or N from a different molecule or from a different part of the same molecule. H-bond interactions play a huge role in the biochemistry of living processes, and in the structures and interactions of biological molecules, with each other and with different molecules including water. Nature's natural solvent, water, is itself a dynamic H-bonded polar structure, which strongly affects solubility and, as (dynamic) water of hydration, interactions between molecules. Compared with covalent and ionic bonds, H-bonds are individually much weaker (

Details

ISSN :
17401194 and 0954982X
Volume :
41
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Biochemist
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5f76927e1cc2370379523159bdad3b72