» Articles » PMID: 18647136

Phenolic Substrates and Suicide Inactivation of Tyrosinase: Kinetics and Mechanism

Overview
Journal Biochem J
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 2008 Jul 24
PMID 18647136
Citations 12
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The suicide inactivation mechanism of tyrosinase acting on its substrates has been studied. The kinetic analysis of the proposed mechanism during the transition phase provides explicit analytical expressions for the concentrations of o-quinone against time. The electronic, steric and hydrophobic effects of the substrates influence the enzymatic reaction, increasing the catalytic speed by three orders of magnitude and the inactivation by one order of magnitude. To explain the suicide inactivation, we propose a mechanism in which the enzymatic form E(ox) (oxy-tyrosinase) is responsible for such inactivation. A key step might be the transfer of the C-1 hydroxyl group proton to the peroxide, which would act as a general base. Another essential step might be the axial attack of the o-diphenol on the copper atom. The rate constant of this reaction would be directly related to the strength of the nucleophilic attack of the C-1 hydroxyl group, which depends on the chemical shift of the carbon C-1 (delta(1)) obtained by (13)C-NMR. Protonation of the peroxide would bring the copper atoms together and encourage the diaxial nucleophilic attack of the C-2 hydroxyl group, facilitating the co-planarity with the ring of the copper atoms and the concerted oxidation/reduction reaction, and giving rise to an o-quinone. The suicide inactivation would occur if the C-2 hydroxyl group transferred the proton to the protonated peroxide, which would again act as a general base. In this case, the co-planarity between the copper atom, the oxygen of the C-1 and the ring would only permit the oxidation/reduction reaction on one copper atom, giving rise to copper(0), hydrogen peroxide and an o-quinone, which would be released, thus inactivating the enzyme.

Citing Articles

Tyrosinases: a family of copper-containing metalloenzymes.

Pretzler M, Rompel A ChemTexts. 2024; 10(4):12.

PMID: 39624788 PMC: 11608171. DOI: 10.1007/s40828-024-00195-y.


Inhibitory Activities of Samples on Tyrosinases Were Affected by Enzyme Species and Sample Addition Methods.

Wang W, Yang L, Wang W, Zhang J, Engelhardt U, Jiang H Int J Mol Sci. 2023; 24(7).

PMID: 37046986 PMC: 10093845. DOI: 10.3390/ijms24076013.


New mechanistic insights into coupled binuclear copper monooxygenases from the recent elucidation of the ternary intermediate of tyrosinase.

Kipouros I, Solomon E FEBS Lett. 2022; 597(1):65-78.

PMID: 36178078 PMC: 9839588. DOI: 10.1002/1873-3468.14503.


Lucigenin-pyrogallol chemiluminescence for the multiple detection of pyrogallol, cobalt ion, and tyrosinase.

Mostafa I, Gilani M, Chen Y, Lou B, Li J, Xu G J Food Drug Anal. 2022; 29(3):510-520.

PMID: 35696239 PMC: 9261783. DOI: 10.38212/2224-6614.3361.


The Relationship between the IC Values and the Apparent Inhibition Constant in the Study of Inhibitors of Tyrosinase Diphenolase Activity Helps Confirm the Mechanism of Inhibition.

Garcia-Molina P, Garcia-Molina F, Teruel-Puche J, Rodriguez-Lopez J, Garcia-Canovas F, Munoz-Munoz J Molecules. 2022; 27(10).

PMID: 35630619 PMC: 9142954. DOI: 10.3390/molecules27103141.