anhydrases
Anhydrases are enzymes or catalytic proteins that promote dehydration reactions in which water is removed to form an anhydride bond between two molecules or within a single molecule. The term is used variably in the literature; some sources reserve anhydrase for enzymes that explicitly catalyze the condensation step yielding an anhydride, while others use it more loosely to describe any enzyme involved in water-removal steps. Because dehydration to form anhydrides often requires energy input or coupling to another process, many anhydrases function in concert with other metabolic steps and may rely on metal cofactors or activated intermediates.
Biochemical context includes the formation of high-energy phosphoanhydride bonds and various acyl anhydrides formed during metabolism.
Mechanistically, anhydrases typically stabilize developing charges and facilitate nucleophilic attack while promoting water removal; metal ions
In chemical synthesis, dehydration to form anhydrides is also achieved with acid catalysts or dehydrating agents,