

Metabolic Medium
The capacity of water to dissolve a large variety of substances makes it an important medium for metabolic reactions
Solutes dissolved into aqueous solutions are more likely to collide with enzymes and undergo necessary chemical reactions
Water can also promote enzyme activity by absorbing heat from exothermic reactions and maintain acid-base neutrality
Substances that are involved in metabolic reactions can be described as being either hydrophilic or hydrophobic
Substances that freely associate and readily dissolve in water are characterised as hydrophilic (‘water loving’) – this includes all polar molecules and ions
Substances that do not freely associate or dissolve in water are characterised as hydrophobic (‘water-hating’) – this includes all large non-polar molecules (lipids)
Transport Medium
The movement of water-soluble substances in plants and animals involves different transport systems
In animals, the blood plasma transports dissolved solutes – including amino acids, simple sugars, wastes (urea) and a small amount of gases (O2 and CO2)
In vascular plants, mineral ions are transported via xylem vessels while dissolved nutrients are transported via the phloem
Certain substances are not water-soluble and cannot be freely transported within an aqueous environment
In animals, lipids are packaged with proteins to form water-soluble lipoproteins that can be transported via the blood
The mechanism of lipid transport is not well understood in plants, but may involve conjugation to amino acids and transport via the phloem