| Literature DB >> 23047482 |
Danielle Cristina Zimmermann Franco1, Gustavo Senra Gonçalves de Carvalho, Paula Rafaela Rocha, Raquel da Silva Teixeira, Adilson David da Silva, Nádia Rezende Barbosa Raposo.
Abstract
Skin pigmentation disorders typically involve an overproduction or uneven distribution of melanin, which results in skin spots. Resveratrol can inhibit tyrosinase, the active enzyme in the synthesis of melanin, but it does not inhibit the synthesis of melanin to an extent that enables its use alone as a skin whitening agent in pharmaceutical formulations, so its use as a coadjuvant in treatment of hyperpigmentation is suggested. Six resveratrol analogs were tested for tyrosinase inhibitory activity in vitro. Among the analogs tested, compound D was the most powerful tyrosinase inhibitor (IC(50) = 28.66 µg/mL), two times more active than resveratrol (IC(50) = 57.05 µg/mL), followed by the analogs A, E, B, F and C, respectively. This demonstrated that the hydroxylation at C4' on the phenolic ring was the molecular modification with most importance for the observed activity.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23047482 PMCID: PMC6268222 DOI: 10.3390/molecules171011816
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Structures of commercially used depigmenting agents.
Tyrosinase inhibitory activity of azaresveratrol analogs and kojic acid.
| Analogs (n = 6) | Chemical Structure | IC 60 min (%) | IC 120 min (%) | IC50 (µg/mL) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 46.43 a | 38.81 f | 44.89 ij | |
|
| 46.69 a | 44.6 fg | 72.58 ij | |
|
| 36.23 b | 31.20 f | 160.1 k | |
|
| 78.16 c | 71.97 h | 28.66 ijl | |
|
| 71.66 c | 68.49 h | 49.47 i | |
|
| 59.88 d | 51.59 gh | 147.96 k | |
| Kojic acid | 90.12 e | 75.92 h | 5.27 l |
Means followed by different letters differ by ANOVA followed by Tukey post hoc test (p < 0.05).
Figure 2Comparison of thebasic structures ofnatural and aza stilbene skeleton.
Scheme 1Synthetic pathway for aza-stilbene derivates.
Spectral data of aza-stilbene derivatives.
| Compounds | δ C | δ | Melting Point (°C) | Yield (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 8.51 | 159.8 | 1602 | 61.4–62.1 | 65.0 |
|
| 8.39 | 159.9 | 1600 | 96.8–97.3 | 72.0 |
|
| 8.80 | 158.8 | 1600 | 89.6–90.7 | 75.0 |
|
| 8.44 | 160.0 | 1602 | 89.2–90.7 | 74.0 |
|
| 8.96 | 163.5 | 1614 | 50.7–51.4 | 63.0 |
|
| 8.43 | 160.2 | 1622 | 53.1–54.2 | 63.0 |
* NMR experiments (ppm) were performed at 300 MHz for 1H and 75 MHz for 13C in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO-d) and IR experiments (cm−1) were performed using KBr disks.