Inhibitory effect of ammonium tetrathiotungstate on tyrosinase and its kinetic mechanism

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Abstract

Tyrosinase requires two copper ions at the active site, in order to oxidize phenols to catechols. In this study, the inhibitory effect of the copper-chelating compound, ammonium tetrathiotungstate (ATTT), on the tyrosinase activity was investigated. ATTT was determined to inactivate the activity of mushroom tyrosinase, in a dose-dependent manner. The kinetic substrate reaction revealed that ATTT functions as a kinetically competitive inhibitor in vitro, and that the enzyme-ATTT complex subsequently undergoes a reversible conformational change, resulting in the inactivation of tyrosinase. In human melanin-producing cells, ATTT evidenced a more profound tyrosinase-inhibitory effect than has been seen in the previously identified tyrosinase inhibitors, including kojic acid and hydroquinone. Our results may provide useful information for the development of whitening agent. © 2006 Pharmaceutical Society of Japan.

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Park, K. H., Lee, J. R., Hahn, H. S., Kim, Y. H., Bae, C. D., Yang, J. M., … Hahn, M. J. (2006). Inhibitory effect of ammonium tetrathiotungstate on tyrosinase and its kinetic mechanism. Chemical and Pharmaceutical Bulletin, 54(9), 1266–1270. https://doi.org/10.1248/cpb.54.1266

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