Hydrochloric acid is a strong mineral acid widely used in biochemical and molecular biology applications. Its complete dissociation in aqueous solution and compatibility with chloride ions make it particularly suitable for protein hydrolysis, nucleic acid depurination, and precise pH adjustment in experimental protocols.
Chemical Properties
Hydrochloric acid (HCl, molecular weight 36.46 g/mol) is typically available as a colorless to slightly yellow fuming aqueous solution (37% w/w, density 1.18 g/cm³, boiling point 108°C). It fully ionizes in water (pKa ≈ -6.3), producing highly acidic solutions (pH < 1 at 0.1 M). The compound is highly soluble and exhibits negative deviation from Raoult’s law, forming an azeotropic mixture at approximately 20.2% HCl. Hydrochloric acid reacts exothermically with metals, bases, and carbonates, generating hydrogen (H₂) or carbon dioxide (CO₂), and is commonly handled as a constant boiling solution (~6 M).
Biochemical Applications
In protein chemistry, hydrochloric acid is extensively used for total protein hydrolysis (6 N HCl, 110°C, 24 h, under vacuum), enabling quantitative recovery of amino acids for amino acid analysis (AAA), with known limitations such as tryptophan degradation and partial loss of serine and threonine. In molecular biology, diluted solutions (0.1–1 N) are employed for controlled DNA depurination, for example in Maxam-Gilbert sequencing or preparation of glycosylase-sensitive substrates. Additionally, hydrochloric acid is used in cell lysis protocols (0.5–2 M, often combined with detergents such as SDS) to facilitate membrane solubilization under highly acidic conditions (pH 1–2). In enzymology, it is critical for activating acid-dependent proteases such as pepsin, which exhibits optimal activity at approximately pH 2.

