- Source: Acid hydrolase
An acid hydrolase is an enzyme that works best at acidic pHs. It is commonly located in lysosomes, which are acidic on the inside. Acid hydrolases may be nucleases, proteases, glycosidases, lipases, phosphatases, sulfatases and phospholipases and make up the approximately 50 degradative enzymes of the lysosome that break apart biological matter.
types of Acid Hydrolase:
-Nucleases (P1 from Penicillium citrinum, used in the food industry for taste enhancement or present in Gouda cheese)
-Lipase: for example lysosomal acid lipase.
-Proteases
-Glycosidases
See also
Antimicrobial peptides
Cathelicidin
Hydrolase
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Glutamat karboksipeptidase II
- Substrat (kimia)
- Lipida
- Asam metilmalonat
- Asam beta-hidroksi beta-metilbutirat
- ENDOG
- Acid hydrolase
- Gamma-glutamyl hydrolase
- Hydrolase
- Epoxide hydrolase
- Fatty-acid amide hydrolase 1
- Lysosome
- List of enzymes
- List of EC numbers (EC 3)
- Glycoside hydrolase
- Serine hydrolase