Abstract
Two types of melanin pigments, brown to black eumelanin and yellow to reddish brown pheomelanin, are biosynthesized through a branched reaction, which is associated with the key intermediate dopaquinone (DQ). In the presence of l-cysteine, DQ immediately binds to the –SH group, resulting in the formation of cysteinyldopa necessary for the pheomelanin production. l-Cysteine prefers to bond with aromatic carbons adjacent to the carbonyl groups, namely C5 and C2. Surprisingly, this Michael addition takes place at 1,6-position of the C5 (and to some extent at C2) rather than usually expected 1,4-position. Such an anomaly on the reactivity necessitates an atomic-scale understanding of the binding mechanism. Using density functional theory-based calculations, we investigated the binding of l-cysteine thiolate (Cys–S−) to DQ. Interestingly, the C2–S bonded intermediate was less energetically stable than the C6–S bonded case. Furthermore, the most preferred Cys–S−-attacked intermediate is at the carbon-carbon bridge between the two carbonyls (C3–C4 bridge site) but not on the C5 site. This structure allows the Cys–S− to migrate onto the adjacent C5 or C2 with small activation energies. Further simulation demonstrated a possible conversion pathway of the C5–S (and C2–S) intermediate into 5-S-cysteinyldopa (and 2-S-cysteinyldopa), which is the experimentally identified major (and minor) product. Based on the results, we propose that the binding of Cys–S− to DQ proceeds via the following path: (i) coordination of Cys–S− to C3–C4 bridge, (ii) migration of Cys–S− to C5 (C2), (iii) proton rearrangement from cysteinyl –NH3+ to O4 (O3), and (iv) proton rearrangement from C5 (C2) to O3 (O4).
Highlights
IntroductionThe polyphenolic pigment found throughout living organisms, is an important biopolymer that provides protection against damaging solar radiation [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]
To identify the initial process of cysteine binding, we investigated the energetic preference of thiolate-attacked intermediates
System is when Cys−S− is at the C3–C4 bridge rather than at the C5 site that was expected from the previous experiments [1,2,3,4,10]
Summary
The polyphenolic pigment found throughout living organisms, is an important biopolymer that provides protection against damaging solar radiation [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. In animals, specialized cells called melanocytes produce melanin pigments and transport them to the skin, hair, and eyes, where it provides external coloration. Understanding the biochemically distinct nature of melanocytes and melanocyte-related tissue reactions is crucial to treat diseases associated with melanogenic processes such as albinism, leukoderma, melanoma cancer, and other related skin disorders. Biosynthesis of melanin (melanogenesis) is initiated by tyrosinase-catalyzed oxidation of the amino acid, tyrosine and its hydroxylated dopa to dopaquinone (DQ). At DQ level, two important reactions determine the nature of melanin formed (Figure 1)
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