hydrolyse |
glyoxalase |
As nouns the difference between hydrolyse and glyoxalase
is that
hydrolyse is hydrolysis while
glyoxalase is (biochemistry) either of a pair of related thiol-dependent enzymes:
glyoxalase І'', which catalyses the isomerisation of the spontaneously formed hemithioacetal adduct between gsh and 2-oxoaldehydes (such as methylglyoxal) into s-2-hydroxyacylglutathione; and ''glyoxalase ІІ , which hydrolyses these thiolesters.
hydrolyse |
butyrylcholine |
As a verb hydrolyse
is an alternative spelling of lang=en.
As a noun butyrylcholine is
a synthetic acetylcholine-like molecule, with activation of some of the same receptors, which is hydrolysed by acetylcholinesterase and (more efficiently) by butyrylcholinesterase.
hydrolyse |
pseudocholinesterase |
As a verb hydrolyse
is an alternative spelling of lang=en.
As a noun pseudocholinesterase is
one of the two types of cholinesterase (the other being acetylcholinesterase), found primarily in the liver where it hydrolyses butyrylcholine.
hydrolyse |
glycosylhydrolase |
As a verb hydrolyse
is an alternative spelling of lang=en.
As a noun glycosylhydrolase is
any of many enzymes that hydrolyse glycosides.
hydrolyse |
exoglycosidase |
As nouns the difference between hydrolyse and exoglycosidase
is that
hydrolyse is hydrolysis while
exoglycosidase is (enzyme) any glycosidase enzyme that hydrolyses a terminal glycosidic bond.
Pages