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The galactosidases are categorized as either alpha or beta, according to the category of glycoside they hydrolyze. The enzyme corresponding to an alpha-galactoside is called alpha-galactosidase ; it catalyzes the hydrolysis of substrates that contain α-galactosidic residues , such as glycosphingolipids or glycoproteins . [ 1 ]
α-Galactosidase ( EC 3.2.1.22, α-GAL, α-GAL A; systematic name α-D-galactoside galactohydrolase) is a glycoside hydrolase enzyme that catalyses the following reaction: [1]
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The enzyme 6-phospho-β-galactosidase (EC 3.2.1.85) catalyzes the following reaction: . a 6-phospho-β-D-galactoside + H 2 O 6-phospho-D-galactose + an alcoholThis enzyme belongs to the family of hydrolases, specifically those glycosidases that hydrolyse O- and S-glycosyl compounds.
A galactoside is a glycoside containing galactose.The H of the OH group on carbon-1 of galactose is replaced by an organic moiety. [1]Structure of ONPG, an example of a β-galactoside.
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Galactan 1,3-beta-galactosidase (EC 3.2.1.145, galactan (1->3)-beta-D-galactosidase) is an enzyme with systematic name galactan 3-beta-D-galactosidase. [1] [2] This enzyme catalyses the following chemical reaction
Heparanase (EC 3.2.1.166, Hpa1 heparanase, Hpa1, heparanase 1, heparanase-1, C1A heparanase, HPSE) is an enzyme with systematic name heparan sulfate N-sulfo-D-glucosamine endoglucanase.