Definition of Hydrolases

1. Noun. (plural of hydrolase) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Hydrolases

1. hydrolase [n] - See also: hydrolase

Medical Definition of Hydrolases

1. Registry number: EC 3. (12 Dec 1998)

Lexicographical Neighbors of Hydrolases

hydroiodide
hydroisomerization
hydroisomerizations
hydroisomerize
hydroisomerized
hydroisomerizes
hydroisomerizing
hydrokinesis
hydrokinetic
hydrokinetics
hydrokryptoacetylene
hydrolabile
hydrolability
hydrolaccolith
hydrolase
hydrolases (current term)
hydrolat
hydrolats
hydrolic cycle
hydrolipid
hydrolipidic
hydrolise
hydrolith
hydrolize
hydrolized
hydrolizes
hydrolizing
hydrologic
hydrological
hydrologically

Literary usage of Hydrolases

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Household Bacteriology for Students in Domestic Sciences by Estelle Denis Buchanan, Robert Earle Buchanan (1913)
"hydrolases. — The hydrolases are hydrolytic enzymes; that is, they bring about decomposition by the incorporation of water, usually resulting in a splitting ..."

2. Household Bacteriology for Students in Domestic Science by Estelle Denis Buchanan, Robert Earle Buchanan (1913)
"These groups are the hydrolases, the oxidases, the catalases, ... The hydrolases are hydrolytic enzymes; that is, they bring about decomposition by the ..."

3. Ending the War Metaphor: The Changing Agenda for Unraveling the Host-Microbe by Forum on Microbial Threats, Institute of Medicine (U.S.) (2006)
"By contrast, our 2.85-Gb genome only contains 98 known or putative glycoside hydrolases and is deficient in the enzyme activities required for degradation ..."

4. Gene Expression in Field Crops: Bibliography January 1991-November 1992 edited by Janet Saunders, Robert D. Warmbrodt (1995)
"The induction requires only the presence of cell wall hydrolases, and is independent of wounding and plasmolysis. The induction of Tntl expression is not ..."

5. Biochemical Bulletin by Columbia University (1912)
""The absorption of water by protoplasm may be influenced to a marked extent by hydrolases," and natural edema may result from, or its development may be ..."

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