Hydrolysis literally means reaction with water. It is a chemical process
in which a molecule is cleaved into two parts by the addition of a
molecule of water. One fragment of the parent molecule gains a hydrogen
ion (H
+
) from the additional water molecule. The other group collects the
remaining hydroxyl group (OH
−
). To illustrate this process, some examples from real life and actual
living systems are discussed here.
The most common hydrolysis occurs when a salt of a weak acid or weak base
(or both) is dissolved in water. Water autoionizes into negative hydroxyl
ions and hydrogen ions. The salt breaks down into positive and
negative ions. For example, sodium acetate dissociates in water into
sodium and acetate ions. Sodium ions react very little with hydroxyl ions
whereas acetate ions combine with hydrogen ions to produce neutral acetic
acid, and the net result is a relative excess of hydroxyl ions, causing a
basic solution.
However, under normal conditions, only a few reactions between water and
organic compounds occur. Generally, strong acids or bases must be added in
order to achieve hydrolysis where water has no effect. The acid or base is
considered a
catalyst
. They are meant to speed up the reaction, but are recovered at the end of
it.
Acid–base-catalyzed hydrolyses are very common; one example is the
hydrolysis of amides or
esters
. Their hydrolysis occurs when the nucleophile (a nucleus-seeking agent,
e.g., water or hydroxyl ion) attacks the carbon of the carbonyl group of
the ester or amide. In an aqueous base, hydroxyl ions are better
nucleophiles than dipoles such as water. In acid, the carbonyl group
becomes protonated, and this leads to a much easier nucleophilic attack.
The products for both hydrolyses are compounds with
carboxylic acid
groups.
Perhaps the oldest example of ester hydrolysis is the process called
saponification. It is the hydrolysis of a triglyceride (fat) with an
aqueous base such as sodium hydroxide (NaOH). During the process,
glycerol, also commercially named glycerin, is formed, and the fatty acids
react with the base, converting them to salts. These salts are called
soaps, commonly used in households.
Moreover, hydrolysis is an important process in plants and animals, the
most significant example being energy
metabolism
and storage. All living cells require a continual supply of energy for
two main purposes: for the
biosynthesis
of small and macromolecules, and for the active transport of ions and
molecules across cell membranes. The energy derived from the
oxidation
of nutrients is not used directly but, by means of a complex and long
sequence of reactions, it is channeled into a special energy-storage
molecule,
adenosine triphosphate (ATP)
.
The ATP molecule contains pyrophosphate linkages (bonds formed when two
phosphate units are combined together) that release energy when needed.
ATP can be hydrolyzed in two ways: the removal of terminal phosphate to
form adenosine diphosphate (ADP) and inorganic phosphate, or the removal
of a terminal diphosphate to yield adenosine monophosphate (AMP) and
pyrophosphate. The latter is usually cleaved further to yield two
phosphates. This results in biosynthesis reactions, which do not occur
alone, that can be driven in the direction of
synthesis
when the phosphate bonds are hydrolyzed.
In addition, in living systems, most biochemical reactions, including ATP
hydrolysis, take place during the
catalysis
of enzymes. The catalytic action of enzymes allows the hydrolysis of
proteins, fats, oils, and carbohydrates. As an example, one may consider
proteases, enzymes that aid digestion by hydrolyzing peptide bonds in
proteins. They catalyze the hydrolysis of interior peptide bonds in
peptide chains, as opposed to exopeptidases, another class of enzymes,
that catalyze the hydrolysis of terminal peptide bonds, liberating one
free amino acid at a time.
However, proteases do not catalyze the hydrolysis of all kinds of
proteins. Their action is stereo-selective: Only proteins with a certain
tertiary structure will be targeted. The reason is that some kind of
orienting force is needed to place the amide group in the proper position
for catalysis. The necessary contacts between an enzyme and its substrates
(proteins) are created because the enzyme folds in such a way as to form a
crevice into which the substrate fits; the crevice also contains the
catalytic groups. Therefore, proteins that do not fit into the crevice
will not be hydrolyzed. This specificity preserves the integrity of other
proteins such as hormones, and therefore the biological system continues
to function normally.
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