Issue 27, 2021

The formulation of chemical potentials and free energy changes in biochemical reactions

Abstract

In 1994, an IUBMB–IUPAC joint committee recommended a revised formulation for standard chemical potentials and reaction free energies motivated by the fact that, in biochemistry, the reactants and products often exist in multiple charge states depending on the pH and pMg of the solution environment. The recommendation involved both the use of (1) a mathematical transform with the intent to hold the pH constant, and (2) the formulation of reference chemical potentials of ionized isomeric species based on the log sum of the individual standard chemical potentials of each isomeric species. Recently, several reports including a 2020 IUPAC report have appeared that challenged the need for such summary formulations, arguing that the standard chemical potentials were sufficient with full accounting of each of the different charge state isomers involved in a biochemical reaction. This work critically evaluates both the use of thermodynamic transforms and the different chemical potential formulations. It is shown that (1) transforms are not necessary to hold the pH constant and (2) demonstrates that the two chemical potential formulations are not equivalent. Which formulation is appropriate depends on what species are measured experimentally or whether an assumption of equilibrium among the charge state isomers is reasonable and desirable.

Graphical abstract: The formulation of chemical potentials and free energy changes in biochemical reactions

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 May 2021
Accepted
17 Jun 2021
First published
28 Jun 2021

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2021,23, 14783-14795

Author version available

The formulation of chemical potentials and free energy changes in biochemical reactions

W. R. Cannon and L. M. Raff, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2021, 23, 14783 DOI: 10.1039/D1CP02045E

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