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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Hydrolytic

Hydrolytic \Hy`dro*lyt"ic\, a. [Hydro-, 1 + Gr. ? to loose.]

  1. (Chem.) Tending to remove or separate water; eliminating water. [archaic]

  2. (Chem.) of, pertaining to, or accompanied by hydrolysis.

    Hydrolytic agents, such as sulphuric acid or caustic alkali.
    --Encyc. Brit.

    Hydrolytic ferment (Physiol. Chem.), an enzyme (formerly referred to as a ferment), which acts only in the presence of water, and which causes the substance acted upon to take up a molecule of water, resulting in the splitting of a chemical bond and often splitting one compound into two. Thus, diastase of malt, ptyalin of saliva, and boiling dilute sulphuric acid all convert starch by hydration into dextrin and sugar. Nearly all of the digestive enzymes are hydrolytic in their action. Since 1910 such an enzyme is usually referred to as a {hydrolase} or {hydrolytic enzyme}.

Wiktionary
hydrolytic

a. Of, pertaining to, or accompanied by hydrolysis.

Usage examples of "hydrolytic".

Specially engineered to react very fast with the hydrolytic enzyme esterase and thus to be completely out of the tissues within 36 hrs.