hydrolysis
Physiology
Biology
(noun)
A chemical process of decomposition involving the splitting of a bond by the addition of water.
Microbiology
Chemistry
Examples of hydrolysis in the following topics:
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Hydrolysis
- Hydrolysis reactions result in the breakdown of polymers into monomers by using a water molecule and an enzymatic catalyst.
- This is what happens when monosaccharides are released from complex carbohydrates via hydrolysis.
- This is what happens when amino acids are released from protein chains via hydrolysis.
- In hydrolysis reactions, a water molecule is consumed as a result of breaking the covalent bond holding together two components of a polymer.
- Dehydration and hydrolysis reactions are chemical reactions that are catalyzed, or "sped up," by specific enzymes; dehydration reactions involve the formation of new bonds, requiring energy, while hydrolysis reactions break bonds and release energy.
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ATP: Adenosine Triphosphate
- Cells couple the exergonic reaction of ATP hydrolysis with endergonic reactions to harness the energy within the bonds of ATP.
- Like most chemical reactions, the hydrolysis of ATP to ADP is reversible.
- Since ATP hydrolysis releases energy, ATP synthesis must require an input of free energy.
- The calculated ∆G for the hydrolysis of one mole of ATP into ADP and Pi is −7.3 kcal/mole (−30.5 kJ/mol).
- Cells couple the exergonic reaction of ATP hydrolysis with the endergonic reactions of cellular processes.
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Overview of the Acid-Base Properties of Salt
- Some salts, such as ammonium bicarbonate (NH4HCO3), contain cations and anions that can both undergo hydrolysis.
- The following is a more complicated scenario in which a salt contains a cation and an anion, both of which are capable of participating in hydrolysis.
- This video examines the hydrolysis of an acid salt, a basic salt, and a salt in which both ions hydrolyze.
- Predict the pH of a solution of a salt containing cations and anions, both of which participate in hydrolysis.
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Preparation of Carboxylic Acids
- Two other useful procedures for preparing carboxylic acids involve hydrolysis of nitriles and carboxylation of organometallic intermediates.
- The hydrolysis may be either acid or base-catalyzed, but the latter give a carboxylate salt as the initial product.
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ATP in Metabolism
- Hydrolysis is the process of breaking complex macromolecules apart.
- During hydrolysis, water is split, or lysed, and the resulting hydrogen atom (H+) and a hydroxyl group (OH-) are added to the larger molecule.
- The hydrolysis of ATP produces ADP, together with an inorganic phosphate ion (Pi), and the release of free energy.
- Water, which was broken down into its hydrogen atom and hydroxyl group during ATP hydrolysis, is regenerated when a third phosphate is added to the ADP molecule, reforming ATP.
- The energy from ATP can also be used to drive chemical reactions by coupling ATP hydrolysis with another reaction process in an enzyme.
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Chemical Assays, Radioisotopic Methods, and Microelectrodes
- The process of hydrolysis is characterized by the ability to chemically split a molecule by the addition of water.
- There are numerous tests utilized in bacterial identification which involve testing for hydrolysis of specific substances.
- These tests include hydrolysis of starch, lipids, casein and gelatin.
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Mechanisms of Chemical Digestion
- Chemical digestion is the process of breakdown of large macronutrients into smaller molecules by enzyme-mediated hydrolysis.
- Proteins and polypeptides are digested by hydrolysis of the C-N bond .
- Proteins and polypeptides are digested by hydrolysis of the C-N bond.
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Strong Acids
- For instance, strong acids can accelerate the synthesis and hydrolysis of carbonyl compounds.
- With carbonyl compounds such as esters, synthesis and hydrolysis go through a tetrahedral transition state, where the central carbon has an oxygen, an alcohol group, and the original alkyl group.
- Strong acids protonate the carbonyl, which makes the oxygen positively charged so that it can easily receive the double-bond electrons when the alcohol attacks the carbonyl carbon; this enables ester synthesis and hydrolysis.
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Polysaccharides
- This is easily demonstrated by acid-catalyzed hydrolysis to the monosaccharide.
- Since partial hydrolysis of cellulose gives varying amounts of cellobiose, we conclude the glucose units in this macromolecule are joined by beta-glycoside bonds between C-1 and C-4 sites of adjacent sugars.
- Also, many enzymes catalyze its hydrolysis.
- Hydrolysis of starch, usually by enzymatic reactions, produces a syrupy liquid consisting largely of glucose.
- Furthermore, slow hydrolysis of pyroxylin yields nitric acid, a process that contributes to the deterioration of early motion picture films in storage.
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Disaccharides
- Acid-catalyzed hydrolysis of these disaccharides yields glucose as the only product.
- Enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis is selective for a specific glycoside bond, so an alpha-glycosidase cleaves maltose and trehalose to glucose, but does not cleave cellobiose or gentiobiose.
- Maltose, sometimes called malt sugar, comes from the hydrolysis of starch.
- Cellobiose is obtained by the hydrolysis of cellulose.