Formic acid serves as a versatile one-carbon metabolic intermediate and reducing agent in biochemical pathways. It plays a critical role in formaldehyde detoxification, purine biosynthesis, and microbial energy metabolism due to its dual aldehyde/acid functionality. Formic acid also functions as a key C1 transfer agent linking CO₂ fixation to biomass production.
Chemical Properties
Formic acid (HCOOH, MW 46.03 g/mol) appears as a colorless pungent liquid (density 1.22 g/cm³, mp 8.4°C, bp 100.8°C) exhibiting weak acidity (pKa 3.75) via HCOOH ⇌ HCOO⁻ + H⁺. Unique among carboxylic acids, it reduces HgCl₂ to Hg₂Cl₂ and Tollens' reagent due to the aldehydic C-H (formyl group), oxidizing to CO₂ (HCOOH → CO₂ + 2H⁺ + 2e⁻, E° = -0.43 V). It is completely miscible with water, forms an azeotrope at 107.1°C, and its hydrogen bonding accounts for a higher boiling point compared to acetic acid.
Biochemical Applications
One-carbon metabolism employs formate via formate-tetrahydrofolate ligase (EC 6.3.4.3) to form formyl-THF for purine synthesis (10-formyl-THF → IMP) and histidine biosynthesis. Microbial bioenergetics leverages formate dehydrogenase (EC 1.97.1.1) for the oxidation of formate to CO₂ + H⁺ + 2e⁻ in anaerobic respiration (E°' -0.43 V couples with menaquinone). In analytical chemistry, 88% HCOOH is used in reversed-phase LC mobile phases (volatile and ion-pairing free), while protein chemistry applies 50–80% formic acid for selective acid hydrolysis of Asp-Pro bonds.

