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Dive into the research topics where Joseph Neptune Rodriguez-Lopez is active.

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Featured researches published by Joseph Neptune Rodriguez-Lopez.


The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 2004

Tyrosinase kinetics: discrimination between two models to explain the oxidation mechanism of monophenol and diphenol substrates.

Lorena G. Fenoll; Marı́a José Peñalver; Joseph Neptune Rodriguez-Lopez; R. Varón; Francisco García-Cánovas; J. Tudela

The kinetic behaviour of tyrosinase is very complex because the enzymatic oxidation of monophenol and o-diphenol to o-quinones occurs simultaneously with the coupled non-enzymatic reactions of the latter. Both reaction types are included in the kinetic mechanism proposed for tyrosinase (Mechanism I [J. Biol. Chem. 267 (1992) 3801-3810]). We previously confirmed the validity of the rate equations by the oxidation of numerous monophenols and o-diphenols catalysed by tyrosinase from different fruits and vegetables. Other authors have proposed a simplified reaction mechanism for tyrosinase (Mechanism II [Theor. Biol. 203 (2000) 1-12]), although without deducing the rate equations. In this paper, we report new experimental work that provides the lag period value, the steady-state rate, o-diphenol concentration released to the reaction medium. The contrast between these experimental data and the respective numerical simulations of both mechanisms demonstrates the feasibility of Mechanism I. The need for the steps omitted from Mechanism II to interpret the experimental data for tyrosinase, based on the rate equations previously deduced for Mechanism I is explained.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010

Tyrosinase inactivation in its action on dopa

Joseph Louis Munoz-Munoz; J.R. Acosta-Motos; Francisco Garcia-Molina; R. Varón; Pedro Antonio García-Ruiz; J. Tudela; Francisco García-Cánovas; Joseph Neptune Rodriguez-Lopez

Under aerobic or anaerobic conditions, tyrosinase undergoes a process of irreversible inactivation induced by its physiological substrate L-dopa. Under aerobic conditions, this inactivation occurs through a process of suicide inactivation involving the form oxy-tyrosinase. Under anaerobic conditions, both the met- and deoxy-tyrosinase forms undergo irreversible inactivation. Suicide inactivation in aerobic conditions is slower than the irreversible inactivation under anaerobic conditions. The enzyme has less affinity for the isomer D-dopa than for L-dopa but the velocity of inactivation is the same. We propose mechanisms to explain these processes.


Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2007

Kinetic Characterization of the Oxidation of Esculetin by Polyphenol Oxidase and Peroxidase

Joseph Louis Munoz-Munoz; Francis Garcia-Molina; Raymond Varon; Joseph Neptune Rodriguez-Lopez; Francis García-Cánovas; J. Tudela

Esculetin has been described as an inhibitor of tyrosinase and polyphenol oxidase and, therefore, of melanogenesis. In this work, we demonstrate that esculetin is not an inhibitor but a substrate of mushroom polyphenol oxidase (PPO) and horseradish peroxidase (POD), enzymes which oxidize esculetin, generating its o-quinone. Since o-quinones are very unstable, the usual way of determining the enzymatic activity (slope of recordings) is difficult. For this reason, we developed a chronometric method to characterize the kinetics of this substrate, based on measurements of the lag period in the presence of micromolar concentrations of ascorbic acid. The catalytic constant determined was of the same order for both enzymes. However, polyphenol oxidase showed greater affinity (a lower Michaelis constant) than peroxidase for esculetin. The affinity of PPO and POD towards oxygen and hydrogen peroxide was very high, suggesting the possible catalysis of both enzymes in the presence of low physiological concentrations of these oxidizing substrates. Taking into consideration optimum pHs of 4.5 and 7 for POD and PPO respectively, and the acidic pHs of melanosomes, the studies were carried out at pH 4.5 and 7. The in vivo pH might be responsible for the stronger effect of these enzymes on L-tyrosine and L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylanaline (L-DOPA) (towards melanogenesis) and on cumarins such as esculetin towards an alternative oxidative pathway.


Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2013

Hydrogen peroxide helps in the identification of monophenols as possible substrates of tyrosinase.

Joseph Luis Muñoz-Muñoz; Joseph Berna; Joseph Neptune Rodriguez-Lopez; R. Varón; Francis García-Cánovas

Tyrosinase exists in three forms in the catalytic cycle depending on the oxidation state of the copper: met- (Em), oxy-(Eox ), and deoxy-(Ed). When O-quinones, products of the enzymatic reaction, evolve chemically to generate an O-diphenol in the reaction medium, the enzyme acts on a monophenol with O-diphenol as reductant, converting Em to Ed. The binding of Ed to molecular oxygen gives Eox, which is active on monophenols, but when the O-quinone product does not generate O-diphenol through chemical evolution, the monophenol does not act as an enzyme substrate. The fact that Eox can be formed from Em with hydrogen peroxide can be used to help identify whether a monophenol is a substrate of tyrosinase. The results obtained in this study confirm that compounds previously described as inhibitors of the enzyme are true substrates of it.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2002

Method for the determination of molar absorptivities of thiol adducts formed from diphenolic substrates of polyphenol oxidase

Marı́a José Peñalver; Joseph Neptune Rodriguez-Lopez; Francisco Garcia-Molina; Francisco García-Cánovas; J. Tudela

Metabolic thiols such as cysteine and glutathione are involved in the biosynthetic pathway of phaeomelanins. They attack the o-quinones generated by polyphenol oxidase in its action on mono and o-diphenols and thus generate adducts. Determination of the molar absorptivities of these adducts is useful for spectrophotometric studies of phaeomelanin biosynthesis, antibrowning reagents in plants, and polyphenol oxidase assay methods. For their calculation, a method based on the depletion of o-diphenol by the action of polyphenol oxidase in the presence of thiol has been proposed. However, the method is slow and presents certain problems, for which reason we propose a new and faster method based on the action of polyphenol oxidase on o-diphenols which are in excess with respect to oxygen. Under these assay conditions there is rapid enzymatic formation of o-quinones, which react stoichiometrically with a thiol giving rise to the corresponding thiol-diphenol adduct. The method has been successfully applied to adducts of cysteine and glutathione with several o-diphenolic substrates of polyphenol oxidase involved in phaeomelanin biosynthesis in skin, neurones, and plants.


Iubmb Life | 2002

Unification for the expression of the monophenolase and diphenolase activities of tyrosinase.

Lorena G. Fenoll; Joseph Neptune Rodriguez-Lopez; Francisco Garcia-Molina; Francisco García-Cánovas; J. Tudela

In order to unify and generalize, we define the International Units used to express the monophenolase and diphenolase activity of mushroom tyrosinase acting on different monophenol/diphenol pairs and establish a quantitative relation. Similarly, the activity units to express tyrosinase activity proposed by suppliers are discussed and compared with the above International Units. Lastly, we study the relation between International Units of diphenolase activity and of monophenolase activity for other biological sources of tyrosinase.


Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2010

Melanogenesis Inhibition Due to NADH

Francis Garcia-Molina; Joseph Louis Munoz-Munoz; Mary Garcia-Molina; Peter Anthony Garcia-Ruiz; J. Tudela; Francis García-Cánovas; Joseph Neptune Rodriguez-Lopez

The effect of NADH on melanogenesis under aerobic conditions involves three types of reaction: (a) acting as tyrosinase substrate (a competitive substrate of L-tyrosine and L-DOPA), (b) irreversible inactivation acting as a suicide substrate of tyrosinase, and (c) non-enzymatic reduction of o-dopaquinone by NADH. Under anaerobic conditions, NADH irreversibly inhibits the enzymatic forms met-tyrosinase and deoxy-tyrosinase. In this paper, we kinetically characterize this coenzyme as it acts as a tyrosinase suicide substrate and propose a kinetic mechanism to explain its oxidation by tyrosinase. In addition, the compound is characterized as an irreversible inhibitor of met-tyrosinase and deoxy-tyrosinase.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009

Melanogenesis inhibition by tetrahydropterines.

Francisco Garcia-Molina; Joseph Louis Munoz-Munoz; J.R. Acosta; Pedro Antonio García-Ruiz; J. Tudela; Francisco García-Cánovas; Joseph Neptune Rodriguez-Lopez

There is controversy in the literature concerning the action of tetrahydropterines on the enzyme tyrosinase and on melanogenesis in general. In this study, we demonstrate that tetrahydropterines can inhibit melanogenesis in several ways: i) by non-enzymatic inhibition involving purely chemical reactions reducing o-dopaquinone to L-dopa, ii) by acting as substrates which compete with L-tyr and L-dopa, since they are substrates of tyrosinase; and iii) by irreversibly inhibiting the enzymatic forms met-tyrosinase and deoxy-tyrosinase in anaerobic conditions. Three tetrahydropterines have been kinetically characterised as tyrosinase substrates: 6-R-L-erythro-5,6,7,8-tetrahydrobiopterin, 6-methyl-5,6,7,8-tetrahydropterine and 6,7-(R,S)-dimethyl-5,6,7,8-tetrahydropterine. A kinetic reaction mechanism is proposed to explain the oxidation of these compounds by tyrosinase.


Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2009

Kinetic Characterization of the Oxidation of Carbidopa and Benserazide by Tyrosinase and Peroxidase

Joseph Louis Munoz-Munoz; Francis Garcia-Molina; Mary Garcia-Molina; J. Tudela; Francis García-Cánovas; Joseph Neptune Rodriguez-Lopez

Carbidopa and benserazide have been described as inhibitors of dopa decarboxylase and both have been used in the treatment of Parkinson’s disease. Because of their chemical structure as polyphenols, these compounds can behave as substrates of tyrosinase and peroxidase. We demonstrate that these enzymes oxidize both substrates. Since o-quinones are unstable, a chronometric method for enzymatic initial rate determinations was used based on measurements of the lag period in the presence of micromolar concentrations of ascorbic acid to kinetically characterize these substrates. In the case of tyrosinase, the values of the Michaelis constant for both substrates were greater than those described for dopa, although the catalytic constants were lower, probably due to the greater size of the substitute group in carbon 1. As regards peroxidase, the saturation of the enzyme by both substrates is possible, however this effect does not occur with the isomers of dopa. The distance of the charges from the benzene ring may enable the ring to approach the iron of the active site and, therefore, act.


Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2010

Effects of Tetrahydropterines on the Generation of Quinones Catalyzed by Tyrosinase

Francis Garcia-Molina; Joseph Louis Munoz-Munoz; Francis Martinez-Ortiz; J. Tudela; Francis García-Cánovas; Joseph Neptune Rodriguez-Lopez

Tetrahydrobiopterine (6BH4) can diminish the oxidative stress undergone by keratinocytes and melanocytes by reducing the o-quinones generated by the oxidation of the corresponding o-diphenols. We found that 6BH4 and their analogs reduced all the o-quinones studied. The formal potentials of different quinone/diphenol pairs indicate that the o-quinones with withdrawing groups are more potent oxidants than those with donating groups.

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