Water is the universal solvent in biochemistry and molecular biology, uniquely enabling biomolecular interactions through its polarity, hydrogen bonding capacity, and amphipathic behavior. Its physicochemical characteristics allow stabilization of macromolecular structures and support essential biochemical reactions in both in vitro and in vivo systems.
Chemical Properties
Water (H₂O) adopts a bent VSEPR geometry with a bond angle of 104.5°, resulting from sp³ hybridization and the presence of two lone electron pairs on the oxygen atom. This configuration generates a highly polar molecule with a dipole moment of 1.85 D and a dielectric constant of approximately 80 at 25°C. Water boils at 100°C and freezes at 0°C under standard atmospheric pressure, with maximum density observed at 4°C (1 g/mL). Its extensive hydrogen-bonding network accounts for anomalous thermodynamic properties, including a high specific heat capacity (4.18 J/g·K). In laboratory settings, ultrapure grades such as Milli-Q water (18.2 MΩ·cm resistivity, <1 ppb total organic carbon) are used to eliminate ionic and organic contaminants in highly sensitive analytical and molecular assays.
Biochemical Applications
In lipid biochemistry, water constitutes the aqueous phase in Folch extraction protocols, facilitating glycolipid partitioning while chloroform isolates phospholipid fractions. It provides the hydration shell required for enzymatic activity in metabolic pathways such as glycolysis and stabilizes nucleic acid structures, including the DNA double helix via structured hydration networks. In protein purification workflows, water serves as a primary solvent and eluent component in ion exchange chromatography (IEC) and hydrophobic interaction chromatography (HIC). For molecular biology applications, nuclease-free water is essential to prevent RNase and DNase contamination during PCR and next-generation sequencing (NGS) workflows. In immunoassays such as ELISA, high-purity water is used for reagent preparation and sample dilution without altering antigenic epitopes or assay sensitivity.

