精品国产一区二区桃色

A Year of (Bio)chemical Elements

For January, it鈥檚 atomic No. 1

Quira Zeidan
Jan. 1, 2019

Following a proposal initiated by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry and other global scientific organizations, the United Nations has declared 2019 the International Year of the Periodic Table of Chemical Elements, or IYPT2019.

Hydrogen High-energy electrons (from the oxidation of food, for example) passed along the electron-transport chain release energy that is used to pump H+ across the membrane. The resulting electrochemical proton gradient serves as an energy store used to drive adenosine triphosphate synthesis by the adenosine triphosphate synthase. Wikipedia

The designation commemorates the 150th anniversary of the first publication of Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev’s periodic table in 1869. Mendeleev’s table was not the first attempt to arrange the just over 60 chemical elements known at the time, but it was the first version to predict the existence of unidentified elements based on the periodicity of the elements’ physical and chemical properties in relation to their atomic mass.

Today’s periodic table contains at least 118 confirmed elements; of these, only about 30 are essential to living organisms. Bulk elements such as hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen and oxygen are abundant structural components of cells and tissues, whereas trace elements (iron, zinc, copper and magnesium, for example) occur in minute amounts as enzyme cofactors and stabilizing centers for protein complexes.

To celebrate IYPT2019, we are launching a yearlong series that features at least one monthly element with an .

Hydrogen

For January, we selected the first element of the periodic table, hydrogen, whose atomic number 1 indicates the presence of a single proton in its nucleus. Hydrogen can occur as a single atom designated as H, as diatomic gas, or H2, in molecules such as water or natural organic compounds (such as carbohydrates, lipids and amino acids) or as negative or positive ions — H- or H+, respectively — in ionic compounds.

Living organisms use hydrogen in oxidation-reduction, or redox, reactions and electrochemical gradients to derive energy for growth and work. Microbes can uptake H2 from the environment and use it as a source of electrons in redox interconversions catalyzed by enzymes called . The transfer of electrons between H2 and acceptor molecules generates H+, and it’s accompanied by substantial energy changes that can be used for cellular metabolism such as synthesis of molecules, cell movement and solute transport.

Cells also use H+ to generate energy from the breakdown of foods such as sugars, fats and amino acids in a process called cellular respiration. In a cascade of metabolic reactions, nutrients like glucose are oxidized and split into smaller molecules, yielding reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, or NADH, and reduced flavin adenine dinucleotide, or FADH2 as biochemical intermediates.

Under aerobic conditions, a series of proteins that comprise the electron transport chain transfer electrons from NADH and FADH2 to cellular oxygen while pumping H+ across a membrane. This process generates a strong H+ electrochemical gradient with enough force to drive the activity of the adenosine triphosphate synthase, resulting in biochemical energy production as the .

The potential energy in H+ gradients can be used to generate heat for thermogenesis in the brown fat tissue of hibernating mammals, to power flagellar motors in bacteria, to transport nutrients into cells or to generate low pH inside vacuoles. These examples highlight the ubiquitous role of a single element — hydrogen — in essential-for-life biochemical reactions across multiple kingdoms.

 

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition monthly.

Learn more
Quira Zeidan

Quira Zeidan is the ASBMB’s education and public outreach coordinator.

Get the latest from ASBMB Today

Enter your email address, and we鈥檒l send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in Science

Science highlights or most popular articles

RA patient blood reveals joint innerworkings
Journal News

RA patient blood reveals joint innerworkings

July 25, 2025

Researchers in the Netherlands use mass spectrometry to compare the proteome of plasma and synovial fluid in rheumatoid arthritis patients and find a correlation. Read more about this recent paper in Molecular & Cellular Proteomics.

Hope for a cure hangs on research
Essay

Hope for a cure hangs on research

July 17, 2025

Amid drastic proposed cuts to biomedical research, rare disease families like Hailey Adkisson鈥檚 fight for survival and hope. Without funding, science can鈥檛 鈥渃atch up鈥 to help the patients who need it most.

Before we鈥檝e lost what we can鈥檛 rebuild: Hope for prion disease
Feature

Before we鈥檝e lost what we can鈥檛 rebuild: Hope for prion disease

July 15, 2025

Sonia Vallabh and Eric Minikel, a husband-and-wife team racing to cure prion disease, helped develop ION717, an antisense oligonucleotide treatment now in clinical trials. Their mission is personal 鈥 and just getting started.

Defeating deletions and duplications
News

Defeating deletions and duplications

July 11, 2025

Promising therapeutics for chromosome 15 rare neurodevelopmental disorders, including Angelman syndrome, Dup15q syndrome and Prader鈥揥illi syndrome.

Using 'nature鈥檚 mistakes' as a window into Lafora disease
Feature

Using 'nature鈥檚 mistakes' as a window into Lafora disease

July 10, 2025

After years of heartbreak, Lafora disease families are fueling glycogen storage research breakthroughs, helping develop therapies that may treat not only Lafora but other related neurological disorders.

Cracking cancer鈥檚 code through functional connections
News

Cracking cancer鈥檚 code through functional connections

July 2, 2025

A machine learning鈥揹erived protein cofunction network is transforming how scientists understand and uncover relationships between proteins in cancer.