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Article
New Ideas From an Old Concept: The Hydrogen Bond
The Biochemist
  • Steve Scheiner, Utah State University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-1-2019
Publisher
Biochemical Society
Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0
Abstract

Ongoing studies of the hydrogen bond (HB), in which a hydrogen (H) atom acts as a bridge between a pair of chemical groups, continues to offer new ideas about this interaction that have applications to biochemical processes. The ability of a proton to transfer within a HB can be controlled by conformational changes that cause small alterations to the HB geometry. The CH group, widely prevalent in biological systems, participates in HBs and contributes to the structure and stability of commonly occurring protein secondary structures such as the β-sheet. The concept of the HB has been extended to systems where the bridging proton is replaced by any of a large variety of electronegative atoms, in the form of halogen, chalcogen, pnicogen and tetrel bonds, with no loss of strength.

Citation Information
Steve Scheiner; New ideas from an old concept: the hydrogen bond. Biochem (Lond) 1 August 2019; 41 (4): 6–9. https://doi.org/10.1042/BIO04104006