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Antioxidant activity, anti-tyrosinase activity, molecular docking studies, and molecular dynamic simulation of active compounds found in nipa palm vinegar

Tyrosinase is a key enzyme in melanogenesis and its inhibitors have become increasingly because of their potential activity as hypopigmenting agents which have less side effects. Nipa palm vinegar is an aqueous product that is normally used as a food supplement. The aim of this study was to study th...

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Autores principales: Chatatikun, Moragot, Tedasen, Aman, Pattaranggoon, Nawanwat Chainuwong, Palachum, Wilawan, Chuaijit, Sirithip, Mudpan, Amron, Pruksaphanrat, Supawita, Sohbenalee, Sasirat, Yamasaki, Kenshi, Klangbud, Wiyada Kwanhian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10680452/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38025738
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.16494
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author Chatatikun, Moragot
Tedasen, Aman
Pattaranggoon, Nawanwat Chainuwong
Palachum, Wilawan
Chuaijit, Sirithip
Mudpan, Amron
Pruksaphanrat, Supawita
Sohbenalee, Sasirat
Yamasaki, Kenshi
Klangbud, Wiyada Kwanhian
author_facet Chatatikun, Moragot
Tedasen, Aman
Pattaranggoon, Nawanwat Chainuwong
Palachum, Wilawan
Chuaijit, Sirithip
Mudpan, Amron
Pruksaphanrat, Supawita
Sohbenalee, Sasirat
Yamasaki, Kenshi
Klangbud, Wiyada Kwanhian
author_sort Chatatikun, Moragot
collection PubMed
description Tyrosinase is a key enzyme in melanogenesis and its inhibitors have become increasingly because of their potential activity as hypopigmenting agents which have less side effects. Nipa palm vinegar is an aqueous product that is normally used as a food supplement. The aim of this study was to study the determination of antioxidant activity and tyrosinase inhibitory activities of aqueous extract of original nipa palm vinegar (AE O-NPV), nipa palm vinegar powder (NPV-P) and aqueous extract of nipa palm vinegar powder (AE NPV-P) were examined. Nipa palm vinegars were evaluated the phenolic and flavonoid content, and the active compounds which were submitted to molecular docking and molecular dynamic simulation, chemoinformatics, rule of five, skin absorption and toxicity. The highest phenolic and flavonoid contents in the AE O-NPV were 2.36 ± 0.23 mg gallic acid equivalents/g extract and 5.11 ± 0.59 mg quercetin equivalents/g, and the highest ABTS radical cation scavenging activity was also found. The AE O-NPV, NPV-P and AE NPV-P showed anti-mushroom tyrosinase activity. The HPLC analysis showed that there were vanillic acid and three flavonoids (catechin, rutin and quercetin). The molecular docking study revealed that the binding of the vanillic acid and three flavonoids occurred in the active site residues (histidine and other amino acids). Moreover, the number of hydrogen bond acceptors/donors, solubility, polar surface area and bioavailability score of the vanillic acid and three flavonoids were acceptable compared to Lipinski’s Rule of Five. The molecular dynamic simulation showed that vanillic acid interacts with HIS284 through π–π stacking hydrophobic interactions and forms a metal-acceptor interaction with the copper molecule at the tyrosinase active site. All compounds revealed good skin permeability and nontoxicity. Nipa palm vinegar could be a promising source of a new ingredient for tyrosinase inhibition for cosmetics or pharmaceutical products.
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spelling pubmed-106804522023-11-24 Antioxidant activity, anti-tyrosinase activity, molecular docking studies, and molecular dynamic simulation of active compounds found in nipa palm vinegar Chatatikun, Moragot Tedasen, Aman Pattaranggoon, Nawanwat Chainuwong Palachum, Wilawan Chuaijit, Sirithip Mudpan, Amron Pruksaphanrat, Supawita Sohbenalee, Sasirat Yamasaki, Kenshi Klangbud, Wiyada Kwanhian PeerJ Computational Biology Tyrosinase is a key enzyme in melanogenesis and its inhibitors have become increasingly because of their potential activity as hypopigmenting agents which have less side effects. Nipa palm vinegar is an aqueous product that is normally used as a food supplement. The aim of this study was to study the determination of antioxidant activity and tyrosinase inhibitory activities of aqueous extract of original nipa palm vinegar (AE O-NPV), nipa palm vinegar powder (NPV-P) and aqueous extract of nipa palm vinegar powder (AE NPV-P) were examined. Nipa palm vinegars were evaluated the phenolic and flavonoid content, and the active compounds which were submitted to molecular docking and molecular dynamic simulation, chemoinformatics, rule of five, skin absorption and toxicity. The highest phenolic and flavonoid contents in the AE O-NPV were 2.36 ± 0.23 mg gallic acid equivalents/g extract and 5.11 ± 0.59 mg quercetin equivalents/g, and the highest ABTS radical cation scavenging activity was also found. The AE O-NPV, NPV-P and AE NPV-P showed anti-mushroom tyrosinase activity. The HPLC analysis showed that there were vanillic acid and three flavonoids (catechin, rutin and quercetin). The molecular docking study revealed that the binding of the vanillic acid and three flavonoids occurred in the active site residues (histidine and other amino acids). Moreover, the number of hydrogen bond acceptors/donors, solubility, polar surface area and bioavailability score of the vanillic acid and three flavonoids were acceptable compared to Lipinski’s Rule of Five. The molecular dynamic simulation showed that vanillic acid interacts with HIS284 through π–π stacking hydrophobic interactions and forms a metal-acceptor interaction with the copper molecule at the tyrosinase active site. All compounds revealed good skin permeability and nontoxicity. Nipa palm vinegar could be a promising source of a new ingredient for tyrosinase inhibition for cosmetics or pharmaceutical products. PeerJ Inc. 2023-11-24 /pmc/articles/PMC10680452/ /pubmed/38025738 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.16494 Text en ©2023 Chatatikun et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Computational Biology
Chatatikun, Moragot
Tedasen, Aman
Pattaranggoon, Nawanwat Chainuwong
Palachum, Wilawan
Chuaijit, Sirithip
Mudpan, Amron
Pruksaphanrat, Supawita
Sohbenalee, Sasirat
Yamasaki, Kenshi
Klangbud, Wiyada Kwanhian
Antioxidant activity, anti-tyrosinase activity, molecular docking studies, and molecular dynamic simulation of active compounds found in nipa palm vinegar
title Antioxidant activity, anti-tyrosinase activity, molecular docking studies, and molecular dynamic simulation of active compounds found in nipa palm vinegar
title_full Antioxidant activity, anti-tyrosinase activity, molecular docking studies, and molecular dynamic simulation of active compounds found in nipa palm vinegar
title_fullStr Antioxidant activity, anti-tyrosinase activity, molecular docking studies, and molecular dynamic simulation of active compounds found in nipa palm vinegar
title_full_unstemmed Antioxidant activity, anti-tyrosinase activity, molecular docking studies, and molecular dynamic simulation of active compounds found in nipa palm vinegar
title_short Antioxidant activity, anti-tyrosinase activity, molecular docking studies, and molecular dynamic simulation of active compounds found in nipa palm vinegar
title_sort antioxidant activity, anti-tyrosinase activity, molecular docking studies, and molecular dynamic simulation of active compounds found in nipa palm vinegar
topic Computational Biology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10680452/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38025738
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.16494
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