Hydrolase

In biochemistry, hydrolases constitute a class of enzymes that commonly function as biochemical catalysts that use water to break a chemical bond: A − B + H 2 O → hydrolase A − OH + B − H {\displaystyle {\ce {A-B + H2O}}\quad {\xrightarrow[{\text{ hydrolase }}]{}}\quad {\ce {A-OH + B-H}}} This typically results in dividing a larger molecule into smaller molecules. Some common examples of hydrolase enzymes are esterases including lipases, phosphatases, glycosidases, peptidases, and nucleosidases.

Source: Wikipedia — Hydrolase (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Hydrolase

In biochemistry, hydrolases constitute a class of enzymes that commonly function as biochemical catalysts that use water to break a chemical bond: A − B + H 2 O → hydrolase A − OH + B − H {\displaystyle {\ce {A-B + H2O}}\quad {\xrightarrow[{\text{ hydrolase }}]{}}\quad {\ce {A-OH + B-H}}} This typically results in dividing a larger molecule into smaller molecules. Some common examples of hydrolase enzymes are esterases including lipases, phosphatases, glycosidases, peptidases, and nucleosidases.

Source: Wikipedia "Hydrolase" · CC BY-SA 4.0

Share this article: X · Bluesky
Privacy Policy