Issue 19, 2023

Inhibitory effects of iron-based carbonaceous nanocomposites on mushroom tyrosinase activity: molecular aspects and mechanistic insights

Abstract

Tyrosinase (Tyr) is a key enzyme in melanin biosynthesis, and its overexpression is related to several skin disorders, including melanomas and hyperpigmentation. Based on its relevant role, various molecules have been studied to control Tyr activity, but they usually present high toxicity and low outcomes. As an alternative, nanomaterials could be explored as inhibitors for Tyr due to their unique properties. In this work, small iron-containing carbon nanocomposites (FeCQDs, ∼10 nm) were obtained without further passivation. The FeCQDs quench the mushroom Tyrosinase (mTyr) fluorescence following both static and dynamic mechanisms, and they bind very tightly to mTyr (Ks∼106 M−1), guided predominantly by hydrophobic interactions and hydrogen bonds. An increase in hydrophobicity of the aromatic microenvironment was observed due to the interaction of mTyr with FeCQDs. Besides the binding features, FeCQDs inhibit very efficiently the mTyr activity (IC50 = 163.9 ± 4.9 nM) and behave as a non-competitive inhibitor. The determined IC50 for FeCQD is 110-fold lower than that of kojic acid. All of the presented results show the potential of metal-containing carbonaceous nanocomposites as efficient mTyr inhibitors.

Graphical abstract: Inhibitory effects of iron-based carbonaceous nanocomposites on mushroom tyrosinase activity: molecular aspects and mechanistic insights

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
24 Feb 2023
Accepted
13 Apr 2023
First published
13 Apr 2023

New J. Chem., 2023,47, 9134-9142

Inhibitory effects of iron-based carbonaceous nanocomposites on mushroom tyrosinase activity: molecular aspects and mechanistic insights

M. R. de Barros, T. M. Menezes, Y. S. Garcia and J. L. Neves, New J. Chem., 2023, 47, 9134 DOI: 10.1039/D3NJ00882G

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