Dimethylformamide (DMF) is a polar aprotic solvent widely used in biochemical and molecular biology laboratories. Thanks to its ability to dissolve both polar and non-polar biomolecules, DMF facilitates a variety of laboratory reactions and extraction procedures. It is particularly valuable in peptide synthesis, nucleic acid manipulation, and analytical workflows where efficient solubilization and reaction stability are required.
Chemical Properties
Dimethylformamide ((CH₃)₂NCHO) contains an amide functional group with a planar C–N bond resulting from resonance stabilization. This structural characteristic contributes to its high dielectric constant (ε ≈ 37), a boiling point of approximately 153°C, and a density of 0.944 g/mL. DMF is completely miscible with water as well as many organic solvents. As an aprotic solvent, it does not donate hydrogen bonds but can accept them through the carbonyl oxygen, enabling efficient stabilization of anionic intermediates in nucleophilic substitution reactions such as SN2 mechanisms. Its relatively low volatility also makes it suitable for reactions performed at ambient laboratory conditions.
Biochemical Applications
In peptide chemistry, DMF plays a key role as a solvent for protected amino acids and polymeric resins during solid-phase peptide synthesis (SPPS). It supports efficient coupling reactions in both Fmoc and tBoc strategies, commonly using activation reagents such as HBTU or DIC, often achieving coupling efficiencies exceeding 95%. In molecular biology, DMF can be used at concentrations of approximately 10–50% to denature proteins in preparation for analytical techniques such as Western blotting or to extract membrane lipids without the use of chloroform-based systems.

