Monday, 23 February 2026

Atoms and Molecules in Biochemistry

Atoms and Molecules in Biochemistry

Biochemistry is fundamentally the chemistry of life. All biological structures from small metabolites to macromolecules like proteins and nucleic acids are composed of atoms arranged into molecules. Understanding atomic structure and molecular formation is essential for grasping biochemical reactions, enzyme action, and metabolic pathways.

1. What is Matter and it’s Forms?

Definition of Matter

Matter is anything that has mass and occupies space. All living and non-living things are made of matter.

Forms of Matter

Matter exists mainly in three physical states, depending on temperature and pressure.

State

Characteristics

Example (Biochemical relevance)

Solid

Fixed shape & volume

DNA crystals, proteins

Liquid

Fixed volume, variable shape

Cytoplasm, blood

Gas

No fixed shape or volume

O₂, CO₂

Types of Matter (Chemical Classification)

Type

Description

Example

Element

Pure substance, one kind of atom

C, H, O, N

Compound

Two or more elements chemically combined

H₂O, NaCl

Mixture

Physical combination

Cytosol

 

CSIR-NET Memory Points

  • Living systems are matter + energy
  • Elements combine to form compounds via chemical bonds
  • Water is the most abundant compound in cells

2. Structure of Atom

An atom is the smallest unit of an element that retains chemical properties.

Basic Structure

Subatomic Particle

Charge

Location

Relative Mass

Proton

+1

Nucleus

1 amu

Neutron

0

Nucleus

1 amu

Electron

−1

Orbitals

~0

Atomic Model (Modern Concept)

  • Nucleus contains protons + neutrons
  • Electrons exist in probability regions (orbital)

CSIR-NET Memory Points

  • Atomic mass ≈ protons + neutrons
  • Chemical behavior depends on electrons
  • Nucleus contributes most of the mass

3. Atomic Number and Mass Number

Atomic Number (Z)

  • Number of protons
  • Determines element identity
  • In neutral atoms: protons = electrons

Mass Number (A)

  • Total number of protons + neutrons

Relation Formula

A=Z+N,

Example Table

Element

Atomic Number (Z)

Neutrons

Mass Number (A)

Carbon

6

6

12

Oxygen

8

8

16

Nitrogen

7

7

14

 

CSIR-NET Memory Points

  • Atomic number never changes for an element
  • Mass number varies → isotopes
  • Biologically important elements: CHNOPS

4. Isotopes and Radioisotopes

Isotopes

Atoms of the same element having same Z but different A.

Examples

  • ¹²C, ¹³C, ¹⁴C
  • Same chemical properties, different physical properties

Radioisotopes

Isotopes with unstable nuclei that emit radiation.

Radioisotope

Radiation

Biochemical Use

¹⁴C

β

Tracer in metabolism

³H (Tritium)

β

DNA labeling

³²P

β

Nucleic acids, ATP

¹²⁵I

γ

Protein labeling

 

CSIR-NET Memory Points

  • Radioisotopes used as biochemical tracers
  • Half-life is critical for experiments
  • ¹⁴C used in carbon dating & metabolic studies

5. Arrangement of Electrons (Electronic Configuration)

Electrons are arranged in energy levels (shells) and subshells (orbitals).

Shell Capacity Rule

Shell

Symbol

Max Electrons

1st

K

2

2nd

L

8

3rd

M

18

 

Orbital and Shapes

Orbital

Shape

Max Electrons

s

Spherical

2

p

Dumbbell

6

d

Cloverleaf

10

 

CSIR-NET Memory Points

  • Valence electrons determine bonding
  • Most biological atoms obey octet rule
  • Carbon forms 4 covalent bonds → backbone of life

6. What is a Molecule?

A molecule is a stable group of two or more atoms held together by chemical bonds.

Types of Molecules

Type

Description

Example

Homoatomic

Same atoms

O₂

Heteroatomic

Different atoms

H₂O

Macromolecules

Large biomolecules

Proteins, DNA

 

Chemical Bonds in Molecules

Bond

Strength

Example

Covalent

Strong

C–C, C–H

Ionic

Electrostatic

NaCl

Hydrogen

Weak

DNA base pairing

Van der Waals

Very weak

Protein folding

 

CSIR-NET Memory Points

CSIR-NET Rapid Revision Table

Concept

Key Focus

Matter

States & types

Atom

Subatomic particles

Atomic number

Identity

Mass number

Isotopes

Isotopes

Tracers

Electrons

Chemical behavior

Molecules

Basis of life

 

Conclusion

Atoms form molecules, molecules form bio molecules, and bio molecules drive life. A solid understanding of atomic structure, isotopes, and molecular bonding is essential for mastering biochemistry and excelling in competitive exams like CSIR-NET Life Sciences.

 


🧬 Biochemistry Interactive Quiz

Click on the options to check your answer!

1. Which subatomic particle determines the chemical identity of an atom?
A) Neutron
B) Proton
C) Electron
D) Positron
2. Which radioisotope is used to label DNA in replication studies?
A) Carbon-14
B) Sulfur-35
C) Tritium (3H)
D) Iodine-125
3. What is the maximum number of electrons the 'L' shell can hold?
A) 2
B) 8
C) 18
D) 32
4. Disulfide bonds in proteins are formed by which element?
A) Phosphorus
B) Nitrogen
C) Sulfur
D) Oxygen
5. Which bond is responsible for the secondary structure (alpha-helix) of proteins?
A) Ionic Bond
B) Covalent Bond
C) Hydrogen Bond
D) Van der Waals
6. Isotopes differ in the number of:
A) Protons
B) Neutrons
C) Electrons
D) Valence electrons
7. The most abundant compound in a living cell is:
A) Protein
B) Water
C) DNA
D) Glucose
8. Which of the following is a Homoatomic molecule?
A) H2O
B) CO2
C) O2
D) NH3
9. Carbon is the backbone of life because it can form:
A) 2 bonds
B) 4 covalent bonds
C) Ionic complexes
D) Hydrogen bonds only
10. 32P is used to label which macromolecule?
A) Proteins
B) Lipids
C) Nucleic Acids
D) Carbohydrates

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