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Model sclerotization studies. 4. Generation of N-acetylmethionyl catechol adducts during tyrosinase-catalyzed oxidation of catechols in the presence of N-acetylmethionine

✍ Scribed by Manickam Sugumaran; Eroica Nelson


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
154 KB
Volume
38
Category
Article
ISSN
0739-4462

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✦ Synopsis


Incubation of catechol with mushroom tyrosinase in the presence of N-acetylmethionine resulted in the generation of an adduct. This product was identified to be N-acetylmethionyl catechol, on the basis of spectral characteristics and wellcharacterized chemical reaction of o-benzoquinone with Nacetylmethionine. Enzyme-catalyzed oxidation of catechol and the subsequent nonenzymatic addition of the resultant quinone to N-acetylmethionine accounted for the observed reaction. That the reaction is not confined to catechol alone, but is of general occurrence, can be demonstrated by the facile generation of similar adducts in incubation mixtures containing N-acetylmethionine, tyrosinase, and different Nacetylmethionines, such as 4-methylcatechol and N-acetyldopamine. Attempts to duplicate the reaction with insect cuticular phenoloxidases were not successful, as the excess N-acetylmethionine used in the reaction inhibited their activity. Nevertheless, occurrence of this nonenzymatic reaction between N-acetylmethionine and mushroom tyrosinase-generated quinones indicates that a similar reaction between enzymatically generated quinones in the cuticle with protein-bound methionine moiety is likely to occur during in vivo quinone tanning as well. Arch. Insect Biochem.