Glycolysed refers to a chemical process in biology or biochemistry where a molecule is glycosylated (receives a sugar group) through glycosidic linkage. The term often appears in discussions of metabolism and enzymatic modification, particularly involving glycol groups. In practice the word is used to describe a substrate that has undergone glycosylation, altering its properties and interactions.
"During the study, the protein was glycosylated, and its stability improved."
"The enzyme catalyzes the glycolysed substrate to form a complex."
"Researchers compared glycosylated versus nonglycosylated forms to assess activity."
"The pharmaceutical glycosylated compound showed better solubility in the bloodstream."
Glycolysed is formed from the prefix glyco- (from Greek glykys, meaning sweet, and used in chemistry to denote sugar-related things) combined with -lyse/d from the Greek lysis (to loosen or dissolve) or -lyze/d as a past participle form, reflecting a chemical modification involving sugar groups. The term runs through biochemistry and enzymology. The root glyco- signals the involvement of carbohydrate groups, especially glycosides or glycoproteins, and -lysed indicates a process of breaking or adding a glycosidic bond. In British English and scientific literature, glycosylation is often used; glycosylated materials are the end result of that modification. First known uses appear in mid-20th-century biochemistry texts as protein glycosylation became a central concept in cell biology, with glyco- prefixes in glycoproteins and glycolipids appearing in older carbohydrate chemistry sources. Over time, glycosylated compounds expanded to pharmacology and biotechnology, where glycosylation affects activity, stability, and immunogenicity of therapeutics. The exact spelling glycolysed follows British orthography with -sed ending indicating past participle action; American English would typically be glycosylated (‑ed) rather than glycolysed for the verb form with -lyse/d root, though in some older pharmacological texts glycosylated is also seen. The term’s use indicates a specific biomedical process rather than a general sugar attachment, and its meaning has remained consistent: the addition of a glycosyl group via a glycosidic bond to another molecule.
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Words that rhyme with "Glycolysed"
-zed sounds
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Pronounce as /ˈɡlaɪ.kɒ.lɪzd/. Break it into gly- (glai) + o- (o) +-lysed (liyzd). The primary stress falls on the first syllable. In careful speech, roughly: GLY-kol-ized, with the final -sed sounding like -zd as in “raised.” If you want a precise cue: run the /ɡ/ into a long /aɪ/ then /kɒ/ (British) or /kær/? Wait: the second is /kɒ/ in UK; keep the final /lɪzd/ with a light, voiced /z/ before the /d/. IPA: ˈɡlaɪ.kɒ.lɪzd.
Common errors: misplacing stress on the second or third syllable; mispronouncing the middle ‘co’ as /koʊ/ instead of /kɒ/ (US might be /ɡlaɪˈkoʊlɪzd/ but accepted form given is /ˈɡlaɪ.kɒ.lɪzd/). Another pitfall is pronouncing -lysed as -lized without the /d/ proper end; ensure the /z/ is voiced before the final /d/. Correct by clearly saying GLY-kol-izd with a final voiced z before d, and keep the first syllable stressed.
US prefers /ˈɡlaɪ.kɒ.lɪzd/ with a broader /ɒ/ in the second syllable; UK keeps similar but with ск smaller difference in rhotics and a non-rhotic tendency where the /r/ is muted in some contexts and emphasis on /ɒ/; AU tends to end more openly with slightly longer vowels and a typical Australian rising intonation at the phrase level. Overall, mainly vowel quality and rhoticity differences influence the sound.
Difficult because of the multi-syllable structure and the cluster /ɡlaɪ.kɒ.lɪzd/ including a mid-back vowel /ɒ/ and a voiced cluster /lz/ before the final /d/. The sequence -ly- and -sed can cause a blending issue, leading to an incorrect 'lyz-id' or 'ly-st' ending. Focus on a clean /lɪzd/ at the end and a crisp /ɡlaɪ/ onset, then keep the secondary syllable /kɒ/ short.
In Glycolysed, does the “glyco” part ever sound like ‘gligh-ko’ or ‘glee-ko’? Answer: The preferred scientific pronunciation uses /ɡlaɪ/ for the first syllable, so it sounds like ‘glai’ as in “glaigh.” Do not turn it into a long 'ee' sound. The second syllable should be /kɒ/ (UK) or /kɑ/ (US depending on region), but keep it short. The final /lɪzd/ contains a clear /l/ and a voiced /z/ before /d/.
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