Peptide bond—An amide   bond    formed  between two amino   acids   through a   condensation
(nucleophilic   acyl    substitution)   reaction.
Phenol—An   alcohol with    an  aromatic    ring,   which   has slightly    more    acidic  hydroxyl    hydrogens   than
other   alcohols.
Phosphodiester bond—The type of bond linking the sugar moieties of adjacent nucleotides in DNA.
Physical    properties—Characteristics  of  compounds   that    do  not change  chemical    composition,    such
as  melting point,  boiling point,  solubility, odor,   color,  and density.
Pi  (π) Bond—The    bonding molecular   orbital formed  when    two parallel    p-orbitals  share   electrons;
exists  as  electrons   clouds  above   and below   the sigma   (σ) bond    between the two nuclei.
Polarity—An uneven  distribution    of  charge  caused  by  atoms   in  the same    molecule    having  different
electronegativities.
Polypeptide—A molecule formed from multiple amino acids connected by peptide bonds.
Preparative thin-layer  chromatography—Large-scale  use of  thin-layer  chromatography  (TLC)   as  a
means   of  purification;   as  the large   plate   develops,   the larger  spot    of  sample  splits  into    bands   of
individual  compounds,  which   can then    be  scraped off and washed  to  yield   pure    compounds.
Principal   quantum number  (n)—Describes   the shell   in  which   an  electron    is  found;  values  range
from    1   to  ∞.
Protonation—The addition of a hydrogen cation (H+) to a molecule.
Pyrophosphate (PPi)—The ester dimer of phosphate ; released when a new nucleotide is
joined to a growing strand of DNA by DNA polymerase.
Quinone—A   compound    produced    by  the oxidation   of  a   phenol  containing  a   conjugated  ring    with
ketones.
