What is the process of hydrolysis?

1 Answer
Apr 9, 2016

Hydrolysis is when you break up a molecule by adding water.

Explanation:

Hydrolysis comes from Hydros, the Greek god of water, and lysis, meaning cut or unbind. Hydrolysis is literally water-cutting.

An example of hydrolysis is with proteins. Proteins are formed with condensation reactions between amino acids - they lose H2O and the bodies of the acids join, forming a long chain called a polypeptide.

If you were to add back in H2O and use an enzyme to help the reaction, the polypeptide would break back down into individual amino acids and some short peptide chains.

Hydrolysis also works with sugars - the glycosidic bonds, formed through condensation reactions too, can be broken down with water, from long, starch-like molecules into individual glucose molecules or other sugar monomers.

Simply, though, hydrolysis is just breaking down long molecules into short ones using water.