| Literature DB >> 33667613 |
Cunyu Liu1, Changyang Ma1, Jie Lu1, Lili Cui1, Mengzhu Li1, Ting Huang1, Yunhui Han1, Yong Li1, Zhenhua Liu2, Yan Zhang3, Wenyi Kang4.
Abstract
Fingerprints of 20 batches of Malus micromalus Makino fruit were established by HPLC coupled with hierarchical cluster analysis (HCA) and principal component analysis (PCA) to estimate the common peaks on the basis of traditional similarity evaluation methods. Chromatographic peaks were identified as p-coumaric acid (P2), ferulic acid glycoside (P6), 4-O-β-Glucopyranosyl-cis-coumaric acid (P8), phloretin-2'-xyloglucoside (P10), phloridzin (P11) and quercetin-3-O-α-rhamnoside (P12) by UPLC-MS/MS method. The results of tyrosinase kinetics experiments showed that: P2 and the concentration of P11 was greater than 0.50 mmol/L mainly had a competitive inhibitory effect on tyrosinase, and the concentration of phlorizin was less than at 0.25 mmol/L, it has a mixed inhibitory effect. P8 was mainly a non-competitive activation type in the concentration range, while P12 was a mixed activation type. The results of tyrosinase molecular docking showed that: P2, P8, P11, P12 was located in the active center of the hydrophobic pocket of the enzyme. They bound to tyrosinase residues by hydrogen bonds and interacted with many hydrophobic residues around them to maintain the structure of the complex. This research provides a rapid method to determine the active compounds in edible plants with the technology of spectrum-effect relationship, component knock-out and molecular docking.Entities:
Keywords: Component knock-out; Malus micromalus Makino fruit; Spectrum-effect relationship; Tyrosinase; molecular docking
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33667613 DOI: 10.1016/j.fct.2021.112086
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem Toxicol ISSN: 0278-6915 Impact factor: 6.023