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The Hypopigmentation Mechanism of Tyrosinase Inhibitory Peptides Derived from Food Proteins: An Overview

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27092710

Keywords

bioactive peptides; tyrosinase activity; hyperpigmentation; mechanism; molecular docking

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFD0901102]
  2. Key-Area Research and Development Program of Guangdong Province [2020B1111030004]
  3. Guangdong Provincial Special Fund For Modern Agriculture Industry Technology Innovation Teams [2021KJ151]
  4. China Agriculture Research System of MOF and MARA [CARS-46]
  5. Special Scientific Research Funds for Central Non-profit Institutes, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences [2020TD69]
  6. Central Public-interest Scientific Institution Basal Research Funds, South China Sea Fisheries Research Institute, CAFS [2021SD06]

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Finding effective tyrosinase inhibitors is challenging due to cell mutation and cytotoxicity. Food-derived peptides have shown excellent anti-tyrosinase activity by inhibiting oxidation reactions, occupying tyrosinase's bioactive site, and regulating gene expression. Functional foods are rapidly developing as they exhibit good biocompatibility.
Skin hyperpigmentation resulting from excessive tyrosinase expression has long been a problem for beauty lovers, which has not yet been completely solved. Although researchers are working on finding effective tyrosinase inhibitors, most of them are restricted, due to cell mutation and cytotoxicity. Therefore, functional foods are developing rapidly for their good biocompatibility. Food-derived peptides have been proven to display excellent anti-tyrosinase activity, and the mechanisms involved mainly include inhibition of oxidation, occupation of tyrosinase's bioactive site and regulation of related gene expression. For anti-oxidation, peptides can interrupt the oxidative reactions catalyzed by tyrosinase or activate an enzyme system, including SOD, CAT, and GSH-Px to scavenge free radicals that stimulate tyrosinase. In addition, researchers predict that peptides probably occupy the site of the substrate by chelating with copper ions or combining with surrounding amino acid residues, ultimately inhibiting the catalytic activity of tyrosinase. More importantly, peptides reduce the tyrosinase expression content, primarily through the cAMP/PKA/CREB pathway, with PI3K/AKT/GSK3 beta, MEK/ERK/MITF and p38 MAPK/CREB/MITF as side pathways. The objective of this overview is to recap three main mechanisms for peptides to inhibit tyrosinase and the emerging bioinformatic technologies used in developing new inhibitors.

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