tiolizis
Tiolizis, or thiolysis in English, is the chemical process in which a thiol acts as a nucleophile to cleave a bond in a target molecule. The reaction is named for the involvement of a thiol (or thiolate) and is used in various branches of chemistry and biochemistry. Common themes include the cleavage of carbon–heteroatom bonds or disulfide linkages, with sulfur-containing reagents serving as the attacking species.
In organic chemistry, thiolysis often proceeds via nucleophilic substitution or addition to electrophilic centers. A typical
In biochemistry and materials science, thiolysis is used to manipulate sulfur-containing linkages. For example, reducing disulfide
Cautions and scope vary with substrate and conditions; thiolysis is distinct from hydrolysis or base-promoted saponification