hydrolysin
Hydrolysin is a historical and nonstandard term that has been used to refer to enzymes that catalyze hydrolysis reactions. In modern biochemistry there is no single molecule or officially recognized enzyme family named hydrolysin; rather, hydrolysin is a generic label for hydrolytic enzymes, collectively known as hydrolases, that cleave chemical bonds through the addition of water.
Origin and usage: The word combines the concept of hydrolysis with suffixes used in enzyme naming. Historically,
Scope and examples: Hydrolytic enzymes include proteases (proteolysis), lipases (lipid hydrolysis), glycosidases (carbohydrate hydrolysis), nucleases (nucleic
Taxonomy and modern usage: In enzyme classification, activities that would be described as hydrolysis fall under