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HYDROLASE

(Redirected from Hydrolytic enzyme)
In biochemistry, a 'hydrolase' is an enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of a chemical bond. For example, an enzyme that catalyzed the following reaction is a hydrolase:
:A–B + H2O → A–OH + B–H

Contents
Nomenclature
Classification
References

Nomenclature


Systematic names of hydrolases are formed as "substrate hydrolase." However, common names are typically in the form "''substrate''ase." For example, a nuclease is a hydrolase that cleaves nucleic acids.

Classification


Hydrolases are classified as 'EC 3' in the EC number classification of enzymes. Hydrolases can be further classified into several subclasses, based upon the bonds they act upon:

★ : ester bonds (esterases: nucleases, phosphodiesterases, lipase, phosphatase)

★ : sugars (glycosylases/DNA glycosylases, glycoside hydrolase)

★ : ether bonds

★ : peptide bonds (Proteases/peptidases)

★ : carbon-nitrogen bonds, other than peptide bonds

★ EC 3.6: acid anhydrides (acid anhydride hydrolases, including helicases and GTPase)

★ EC 3.7: carbon-carbon bonds

★ EC 3.8: halide bonds

★ EC 3.9: phosphorus-nitrogen bonds

★ EC 3.10: sulfur-nitrogen bonds

★ EC 3.11: carbon-phosphorus bonds

★ EC 3.12: sulfur-sulfur bonds

★ EC 3.13: carbon-sulfur bonds

References



EC 3 Introduction from the Department of Chemistry at Queen Mary, University of London, only covers 3.1-3.4

More detailed taxonomy

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