Hydrophillic: Difference between revisions

From The School of Biomedical Sciences Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
Nnjm2 (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
Hydrophilic means [[Water|water]] loving, it is a [[Molecule|molecule]] that can dissolve or interact with water. A hydrophilic molecule or part of the molecule is charged or [[Polar|polar]], this is what gives the molecule the characteristic above. An example of a hydrophilic molecule is [[D-glucose|D-glucose<ref>Bradley, Phillip (2006), Compendium for Medical Sciences. Banbury: Scion Publishing limited</ref>]]. Phosphate heads in the plasma membrane are hydrophilic.  
Hydrophilic means [[Water|water]] loving, it is a [[Molecule|molecule]] that can dissolve or interact with [[water|water]]. A hydrophilic molecule or part of the [[molecule|molecule]] is charged or [[Polar|polar]], this is what gives the molecule the characteristic above. An example of a hydrophilic molecule is [[D-glucose|D-glucose]]<ref>Bradley, Phillip (2006), Compendium for Medical Sciences. Banbury: Scion Publishing limited</ref>. Phosphate heads in the [[plasma membrane|plasma membrane]] are hydrophilic.  


=== References  ===
=== References  ===


<references />&nbsp;<br><br>
<references />&nbsp;<br><br>

Revision as of 20:24, 20 October 2016

Hydrophilic means water loving, it is a molecule that can dissolve or interact with water. A hydrophilic molecule or part of the molecule is charged or polar, this is what gives the molecule the characteristic above. An example of a hydrophilic molecule is D-glucose[1]. Phosphate heads in the plasma membrane are hydrophilic.

References

  1. Bradley, Phillip (2006), Compendium for Medical Sciences. Banbury: Scion Publishing limited