Also known as GALCERase, galactocerebrosidase, galactosylceraminidase, galactocerebroside beta-galactosidase, galactosylceramide beta-galactosidase, GALC, testis tissue sperm-binding protein Li 88E, testis tissue sperm-binding protein Li 89A
Galactosylceramidase (or galactocerebrosidase), , is an enzyme that removes galactose from ceramide derivatives (galactosylceramides) by catalysing the hydrolysis of galactose ester bonds of galactosylceramide, galactosylsphingosine, lactosylceramide, and monogalactosyldiglyceride.
via PubMed
Galactosylceramidase (or galactocerebrosidase), , is an enzyme that removes galactose from ceramide derivatives (galactosylceramides) by catalysing the hydrolysis of galactose ester bonds of galactosylceramide, galactosylsphingosine, lactosylceramide, and monogalactosyldiglyceride.
It is a lysosomal protein, encoded in humans by the GALC gene. Mutations in this gene have been associated with Krabbe disease, also known as galactosylceramide lipidosis.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).