Journal
JOURNAL OF INORGANIC AND ORGANOMETALLIC POLYMERS AND MATERIALS
Volume 31, Issue 2, Pages 886-897Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10904-020-01729-w
Keywords
Zinc oxide; Nanoparticles; Photocatalytic; Tyrosinase inhibition; Kinetics
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The study utilized metabolites of Euphorbia sanguinea to synthesize zinc oxide nanoparticles, which were then used for photodegradation of Malachite green dye and tyrosinase inhibition. The nanoparticles demonstrated efficient degradation of the dye under solar radiation and good inhibition of tyrosinase enzyme.
In the study, metabolites ofEuphorbia sanguineawere used as benign reducing and stabilizing agents to obtain zinc oxide nanoparticles (ZnO-NPs). The nanoparticles were evaluated as dual agent for photodegradation of Malachite green dye andtyrosinaseinhibitior of mushroom tyrosine enzyme. Surface plasmon bands and energy band gaps of the ZnO-NPs were within the range 356-378 nm and 2.72-4.37 eV respectively as obtained from the UV-Vis spectra. SEM/EDS elemental mapping of the nanoparticles gave flower-like shape and even distribution of zinc and oxygen. XRD result revealed crystallographic peaks assigned to hexagonal phase of zinc oxide. The metal oxide nanoparticles were used to achieve 53% percentage degradation of Malachite green dye solution in less than a minute of solar radiation, which increased to 92% in 60 min. A first order kinetics with correlation coefficient R(2)of 0.937, rate constant of 0.0084 min(-1)and half-life of 82.52 min was established for the photodegradation process. The ZnONPs exhibited goodtyrosinaseinhibition with IC50 of 49.016 mu g/ml. The mode of enzymatic inhibition was competitive with an inhibition constant (Ki) of 0.525 mM using Lineweaver-Burk kinetic model.
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