15.2 Water
219
Table 15.4 Morphology and other properties of a typical eukaryotic cellSuperscript normal aa
Property
Shape
Sphere
Density
1.025 g/cmcubed3
Radius
5muµm
Volume
5 times 10 Superscript negative 165 × 10−16 mcubed3
Surface charge
negative 10−10 fC/muµmsquared2
Coat material
polysaccharide
Coat thickness
10 nm
Coat charge density
negative 5−5MC/mcubed3
Superscript normal aaA typical prokaryote, such as the organism specified in Table 15.2, would have a diameter about
10 times smaller
The interior of the cell is an exceedingly crowded milieu (compare the quantities of
molecules with the dimensions given in Table 15.4). Although water constitutes about
70% of a typical cell, very little of this water is free, bulk material. The very high con-
centrations of molecules and macromolecules ensure that the cytoplasm is a highly
viscous medium. Moreover, most of the macromolecules (e.g., proteins) are attached
to larger structures such as the internal membranes. Kempner and Miller’s classic
experiments, in which they centrifuged intact cells to separate macromolecules from
the water, demonstrated this very clearly—hardly any macromolecules were found
in the aqueous fraction. This was in sharp contrast to the result of the traditional bio-
chemical procedure of destroying all ultrastructure by mechanical homogenization,
yielding an aqueous cytosol containing many dissolved enzymes (cf. Sect. 14.2).
The effect of the ultrastructure is twofold: to divide the cell up into compartments,
not hermetically separated from one another but allowing access to different zones
to be controlled, and to provide two-dimensional surfaces on which searching for
and finding reaction partners is far more efficient than in an unstructured bulk.1
The separation of the macromolecules, which of course plays a crucial part in
experimental bioinformatics, is dealt with in Part III.
15.2
Water
As seen from Table 15.2, water is overwhelmingly dominant in the cell. Water (HSubscript 22O)
is a very unusual substance, as can be inferred from its extraordinarily high boiling
point (compared with other molecules of comparable size) and large specific heat. A
salient feature of the molecule is its great polarity—the bond between the oxygen and
the hydrogen has a very strong ionic character. The electrostatic attraction between
the positively charged hydrogen (delta plusδ+) and the negatively charged electron lone pair
on the oxygen (delta minusδ−) constitutes the hydrogen bond (Fig. 15.1). It can be thought of as
1 See Ramsden and Grätzel (1986).