Abstract

Sanggenone C, oxyresveratrol, catechin and l-epicatechin exist in Morus and Hulless Barley as natural polyphenols with antityrosinase activity. Little research on their synergistic and structure–function relationships of them has been reported in recent years. In this paper, the inhibition mechanisms of these four plant polyphenols were investigated by enzyme kinetics, HPLC, fluorescence spectra, and molecular docking methods. The results showed that oxyresveratrol (IC50 = 1.096 ± 0.048 μg/mL), sanggenone C (IC50 = 13.360 ± 1.029 μg/mL), l-epicatechin (IC50 = 55.730 ± 1.762 μg/mL), and catechin (IC50 = 148.500 ± 3.355 μg/mL) exhibited tyrosinase inhibition activity. When sangenone C (14 μg/mL) was mixed with l-epicatechin (56 μg/mL) at 4:1 (40 μL + 10 μL), the highest tyrosinase inhibition was achieved. Molecular docking showed that the number and position of phenolic hydroxyls of polyphenols were the key for tyrosinase inhibition activity. This study provided new ideas for the application of these four plant polyphenols from Hulless Barley and Morus as tyrosinase inhibitors in food preservation.

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