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1.
Several genes critical to the regulation of melanin production in mammals have recently been cloned and characterized. They map to the albino, brown, and slaty loci in mice, and encode proteins with similar structures and features, but with distinct catalytic capacities. The albino locus encodes tyrosinase, an enzyme with three distinct catalytic activities—tyrosine hydroxylase, 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) oxidase and DHI (5,6-dihydroxyindole) oxidase. The brown locus encodes TRP-l (tyrosinase-related protein-I), which has the same, but greatly reduced, catalytic potential. The slaty locus encodes TRP-2, another tyrosinase related-protein, which has DOPAchrome tautomerase activity. In this study we have examined the enzymatic interactions of these proteins, and their regulation by a novel melanogenic inhibitor. We observed that tyrosinase activity is more stable in the presence of TRP-l and/or TRP-2, but that the catalytic function of TRP-2 is not affected by the presence of TRP-1 or tyrosinase. Other factors also may influence melanogenesis and a unique melanogenic inhibitor suppresses tyrosinase and DOPAchrome tautomerase activities, but does not affect the spontaneous rate of DOPAchrome decarboxylation to DHI. The results demonstrate the catalytic functions of these proteins and how they stably interact within a melanogenic complex in the melanosome to regulate the quantity and quality of melanin synthesized by the melanocyte.  相似文献   

2.
Melanocytes produce two chemically distinct types of melanin pigments, eumelanin and pheomelanin. These pigments can be quantitatively analyzed by acidic permanganate oxidation or reductive hydrolysis with hydriodic acid to form pyrrole-2,3,5-tricarboxylic acid or aminohydroxyphenylalanine, respectively. About 30 coat color genes in mice have been cloned, and functions of many of those genes have been elucidated. However, little is known about the interacting functions of these loci. In this study, we used congenic mice to eliminate genetic variability, and analyzed eumelanin and pheomelanin contents of hairs from mice mutant at one or more of the major pigment loci, i.e., the albino (C) locus that encodes tyrosinase, the slaty (Slt) locus that encodes tyrosinase-related protein 2 (TRP2 also known as dopachrome tautomerase, DCT), the brown (B) locus that encodes TRP1, the silver (Si) locus that encodes a melanosomal silver protein, the agouti (A) locus that encodes agouti signaling protein (ASP), the extension (E) locus that encodes melanocortin-1 receptor, and the mahogany (Mg) locus that encodes attractin. We also measured total melanin contents after solubilization of hairs in hot Soluene-350 plus water. Hairs were shaved from 2-3-month-old congenic C57BL/6J mice. The chinchilla (c(ch)) allele is known to encode tyrosinase, whose activity is about one third that of wild type (C). Phenotypes of chinchilla (c(ch)/c(ch)) mice that are wild type or mutant at the brown and/or slaty, loci indicate that functioning TRP2 and TRP1 are necessary, in addition to high levels of tyrosinase, for a full production of eumelanin. The chinchilla allele was found to reduce the amount of pheomelanin in lethal yellow and recessive yellow mice to less than one fifth of that in congenic yellow mice that were wild type at the albino locus. This indicates that reduction in tyrosinase activity affects pheomelanogenesis more profoundly compared with eumelanogenesis. Hairs homozygous for mutation at the slaty locus contain 5,6-dihydroxyindole-2-carboxylic acid (DHICA)-poor melanin, and this chemical phenotype was retained in hairs that were mutant at both the brown locus and the slaty locus. Hair from mice mutant at the brown locus, but not at the slaty locus, do not contain DHICA-poor melanin. This indicates that the proportion of DHICA in eumelanin is determined by TRP2, but not by TRP1. Mutation at the slaty locus (Slt(lt)) was found to have no effect on pheomelanogenesis, supporting a role of TRP2 only in eumelanogenesis. The mutation at silver (si) locus showed an effect similar to brown, a partial suppression of eumelanogenesis. The mutation at mahogany (mg) locus partially suppressed the effect of lethal yellow (Ay) on pheomelanogenesis, supporting a role of mahogany in interfering with agouti signaling. These results show that combination of double mutation study of congenic mice with chemical analysis of melanins is useful in evaluating the interaction of pigment gene functions.  相似文献   

3.
Tyrosinase-related protein 1 (TRP1) maps to the brown locus in mice. Although the specific function of TRP1 has been in dispute, mutations in its structural gene result in the formation of brown rather than black melanin. We have investigated the melanogenic function of TRP1 by using immune-affinity purification of the protein and also by using transfection of its gene into fibroblasts to study its characteristics. We show that TRP1 has the ability to oxidize DHICA, a melanogenic intermediate derived from DOPAchrome. In addition, TRP1 has the ability to interact with tyrosinase and significantly stabilize the latter's catalytic function.  相似文献   

4.
The production of melanin pigment in mammals requires tyrosinase, an enzyme which hydroxylates the amino acid tyrosine to DOPA (3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine), thus allowing the cascade of reactions necessary to synthesize that biopolymer. However, there are other regulatory steps that follow the action of tyrosinase and modulate the quantity and quality of the melanin produced. DOPAchrome tautomerase is one such melanogenic enzyme that isomerizes the pigmented intermediate DOPAchrome to DHICA (5,6-dihydroxyindole-2-carboxylic acid) rather than to DHI (5,6-dihydroxyindole), which would be generated spontaneously. This enzyme thus regulates a switch that controls the proportion of carboxylated subunits in the melanin biopolymer. Efforts to clone the gene for tyrosinase have resulted in the isolation of a family of tyrosinase related genes which have significant homology and encode proteins with similar predicted structural characteristics. Using specific antibodies generated against synthetic peptides encoded by unique areas of several of those proteins, we have immuno-affinity purified them and studied their melanogenic catalytic functions. We now report that TRP-2 (tyrosinase related protein-2), which maps to and is mutated at the slaty locus in mice, encodes a protein with DOPAchrome tautomerase activity.  相似文献   

5.
Two pigmentation related genes have recently been cloned which map to the brown (b) and albino (c) loci of mice; these loci influence the quality and quantity, respectively, of melanin produced by melanocytes. Both these gene products are biochemically similar and have extensive amino acid sequence similarity to each other and to lower forms of tyrosinase (EC 1.14.18.1), a copper binding enzyme responsible for melanin production. In order to characterize the catalytic activities of these molecules, we have synthesized peptides and prepared antibodies to them which specifically recognize the gene products in question. By use of immune affinity purification protocols, we have isolated the proteins encoded by the brown and albino loci and have determined that both have the catalytic functions ascribed to tyrosinase, i.e. hydroxylation of tyrosine to 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) and the oxidation of DOPA to DOPAquinone. These are the critical reactions to melanogenesis since melanin pigment can be spontaneously produced from those products. The specific activity of the albino locus encoded product is considerably higher than that of the protein encoded by the brown locus, although the latter protein is present in higher quantity in melanocytes than is the protein encoded by the albino locus. These results are surprising since it was anticipated that tyrosinase was the product of single gene locus, and suggest that regulation of melanogenesis in mammals is controlled at the enzymatic level by several different gene products.  相似文献   

6.
The expression of various melanogenic proteins, including tyrosinase, the tyrosinase-related proteins 1 (TRP1) and 2 (TRP2/DOPAchrome tautomerase), and the silver protein in human melanocytes was studied in six different human melanoma cell lines and compared to a mouse derived melanoma cell line. Analysis of the expression of tyrosinase, TRP1, TRP2, and the silver protein using flow cytometry revealed that in general there was a positive correlation between melanin formation and the expression of those melanogenic enzymes. Although several of the melanoma cell lines possessed significant activities of TRP2, the levels of DOPAchrome tautomerase in extracts of human cells were relatively low compared to those in murine melanocytes. Melanins derived from melanotic murine JB/MS cells, from melanotic human Ihara cells and HM-IY cells, from sepia melanin, and from C57BL/6 mouse hair were chemically analyzed. JB/MS cells, as well as Ihara cells and HM-TY cells, possessed significant amounts of 5,6-dihydroxyindole-2-carboxylic acid (DHICA) derived melanins, this being dependent on the activity of TRP2. Kinetic HPLC assays showed that 5,6-dihydroxyindole (DHI) produced during melanogenesis was metabolized quickly to melanin in pigmented KHm-1/4 cells, whereas DHI was stable in amelanotic human SK-MEL-24 cells. A melanogenic inhibitor that has been purified from SK-MEL-24 cells that suppressed oxidation of DHI in the presence or absence of tyrosinase, but had no effect on DHICA oxidation. The sum of these results suggest that the expression of melanogenic enzymes as well as the activity of a melanogenic inhibitor are critical to the production of melanin synthesis in humans.  相似文献   

7.
Most of our knowledge of the mammalian tyrosinase related protein (TRP) activities is derived from studies using murine melanoma models, such as B16 or Cloudman S-91 melanocytes. Owing to the high degree of homology between the murine and human enzymes, it has been assumed that their kinetic behavior could be similar. However, the protein sequences at the metal binding sites of the murine and human enzymes show some differences of possible functional relevance. These differences are more significant in the metal-A site than in the metal-B site. By using three human melanoma cell lines (HBL, SCL, and BEU), we have studied the catalytic abilities of the human melanogenic enzymes in comparison to those obtained for the counterpart murine enzymes isolated from B16 melanoma. We have found that TRP2 extracted from all cell lines show dopachrome tautomerase activity, although the activity levels in human malignant melanocytes are much lower than in mouse cells. Reconstitution experiments of the human enzyme indicate that TRP2 has Zn at its metal binding-sites. Although mouse tyrosinase does not show DHICA oxidase activity, and this step of the melanogenesis pathway is specifically catalyzed by mouse TRP1, the human enzyme seems to recognize carboxylated indoles. Thus, human tyrosinase could display some residual DHICA oxidase activity, and the function of human TRP1 could differ from that of the murine protein. Attempts to clarify the nature of the metal cofactor in TRP1 were unsuccessful. The enzyme contains mostly Fe and Cu, but the reconstitution of the enzymatic activity from the apoprotein with these ions was not possible.  相似文献   

8.
Enzymatic control of pigmentation in mammals.   总被引:34,自引:0,他引:34  
Visible pigmentation in mammals results from the synthesis and distribution of melanin in the skin, hair bulbs, and eyes. The melanins are produced in melanocytes and can be of two basic types: eumelanins, which are brown or black, and phaseomelanins, which are red or yellow. In mammals typically there are mixtures of both types. The most essential enzyme in this melanin biosynthetic pathway is tyrosinase and it is the only enzyme absolutely required for melanin production. However, recent studies have shown that mammalian melanogenesis is not regulated solely by tyrosinase at the enzymatic level, and have identified additional melanogenic factors that can modulate pigmentation in either a positive or negative fashion. In addition, other pigment-specific genes that are related to tyrosinase have been cloned which encode proteins that apparently work together at the catalytic level to specify the quantity and quality of the melanins synthesized. Future research should provide a greater understanding of the enzymatic interactions, processing, and tissue specificity that are important to pigmentation in mammals.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The albino (tyrosinase, Tyrc), brown (tyrosinase-related protein 1, Tyrp1b) and slaty (tyrosinase-related protein 2, tyrp2slt) loci are all involved in the regulation of melanogenesis. Phenotypes of inbred mice mutant at two or more of these loci are not always explicable by simple summation of the established or suspected catalytic functions of the gene products. These phenotypes suggest that relationships among the proteins extend beyond the obvious fact that they catalyze different steps in the same melanogenic pathway, and that they may also interact intimately in such a way that a mutation in one impacts the function of the other(s). Previous studies have attributed catalytic activities to each member of this trio; however, it has been difficult to study the proteins individually, either in vivo or in tissues or cells. Therefore, we undertook to transfect the genes, in revealing combinations, into COS-7 cells (which have no melanogenic apparatus of their own) to clarify the interacting functions of their encoded proteins. Specifically, we attempted to evaluate the effects of Tyrp1 and Tyrp2 proteins on tyrosinase protein. We report evidence that Tyrp1 stabilizes tyrosinase, confirming previous observations, and, in addition, demonstrate that Tyrp1 decreases tyrosinase activity. By contrast, Tyrp2 increases tyrosinase activity by stabilizing the protein. We conclude that both Tyrp1 and Tyrp2, in addition to other catalytic functions they may possess, act together to modulate tyrosinase activity.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Specific identification of an authentic clone for mammalian tyrosinase   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Tyrosinase, the critical enzyme to melanin pigmentation in mammals, occurs as a series of isozymic forms, which have been previously regarded as different stages in processing of a single precursor form. Recently, three different cDNA clones have been identified which may encode tyrosinase, they share extensive sequence homology but are distinct; two of them have been mapped to genetic loci which regulate different aspects of melanogenesis. Since direct confirmation of the authentic tyrosinase sequence has proven impossible by conventional protein sequencing strategies, we have approached the identification of the tyrosinase gene by synthesizing peptides encoded by the putative genes and preparing antibodies to those peptides. By use of pulse-chase labeling and immunoprecipitation analyses, and by enzymatic determinations, pMT4 (which maps to the brown b locus in mice) is shown to encode a molecule with tyrosinase catalytic activity which is biochemically identical with authentic tyrosinase. However, our results raise the possibility that other gene products may contribute to melanogenesis by one or more melanogenic activities.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Although melanins can be formed in vitro by the unique action of tyrosinase on L-tyrosine, it is now well accepted that other enzymes termed tyrosinase-related proteins are involved in mammalian melanogenesis. However, some aspects of their roles in the regulation of the pathway are still unknown. The action of dopachrome tautomerase on L-dopachrome yields DHICA, a stable dihydroxyindole with a low rate of spontaneous oxidation. However, DHICA is efficiently incorporated to the pigment, as judged by the high content of carboxylated indole units in natural melanins. Therefore, the fate of this melanogenic intermediate and the mechanisms of its incorporation to the melanin polymer are major issues in the study of melanogenesis. We have recently shown that mouse melanosomes contain two electrophoretically distinguishable tyrosinase isoenzymes, LEMT and HEMT, that can be purified and completely resolved (Jiménez-Cervantes et al., 1993a). Herein, we have compared the ability of these tyrosinases to catalyze DHICA oxidation. Although highly purified LEMT shows a very low specific activity for dopa oxidation in comparison to HEMT, it is able to catalyze DHICA oxidation. However, the DHICA oxidase activity of HEMT was very low, if significant. The ability of purified LEMT to catalyze DHICA oxidation was abolished by heat, trypsin, or phenylthiourea treatments. LEMT acting on DHICA caused the formation of a brownish soluble color similar to DHICA-melanin. Immunoprecipitation of the DHICA oxidase activity of LEMT by specific antibodies suggests that this activity corresponds to TRP1. These results indicate that LEMT, most probably identical to the product of the b locus, is a tyrosinase having a specific DHICA oxidase activity. Opposite to HEMT, the true tyrosinase encoded by the albino locus, its role in melanogenesis would be related to the incorporation of DHICA into eumelanin rather than to the first steps of the pathway.  相似文献   

15.
Mutational mapping of the catalytic activities of human tyrosinase.   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Tyrosinase (EC 1.14.18.1) is a copper-containing metalloglycoprotein that catalyzes several steps in the melanin pigment biosynthetic pathway; the hydroxylation of tyrosine to L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (dopa) and the subsequent oxidation of dopa to dopaquinone. It has been proposed that tyrosinase is also able to oxidize 5,6-dihydroxyindole (DHI), a later product in the melanogenic pathway, to indole-5,6-quinone. Tyrosinase enzymatic activity is deficient in patients with classic type I oculocutaneous albinism (OCA), and more than 50 distinct mutations have now been identified in the tyrosinase genes of such patients. To determine the effects of the various tyrosinase gene mutations on the catalytic activities of the enzyme, we carried out site-directed mutagenesis of human tyrosinase cDNA, transiently expressed the mutant cDNAs in transfected HeLa cells, and assayed the resultant encoded proteins for tyrosine hydroxylase, dopa, and DHI oxidase activities, and resulting melanin production. The tyrosine hydroxylase activity of normal tyrosinase is thermostable, whereas its dopa oxidase and DHI oxidase activities are temperature-sensitive. Although all amino acid substitutions tested generally affected the dopa oxidase and DHI oxidase activities in parallel, several exerted distinctly different effects on the tyrosine hydroxylase activities. Together, these results confirm the DHI oxidase activity of mammalian tyrosinase and suggest that the dopa oxidase and DHI oxidase activities of tyrosinase share a common catalytic site, whereas the tyrosine hydroxylase catalytic site is at least partially distinct in the tyrosinase polypeptide.  相似文献   

16.
17.
DOPAchrome tautomerase (DCT) is known to control the ratio of DHICA/DHI formed within the melanocyte, but physiologic significance of this activity is not yet fully elucidated. In this study the two melanin monomers are shown to inhibit with different efficacy the initial, tyrosinase-controlled, melanogenic reaction, namely conversion of L-tyrosine to DOPAchrome (2-carboxy-2,3-dihydroindole-5,6-quinone). This is demonstrated in the test tube assay system whereby formation of DOPAchrome is catalyzed by i) isolated premelanosomes (PMS), ii) tyrosinase-rich PMS glycoproteins, or iii) tyrosinase purified from fibroblasts transfected with human tyrosinase gene. Both DHI and DHICA suppress the conversion of L-tyrosine to DOPAchrome when added to reaction mixture but the inhibitory effect is far more strongly pronounced by DHI. DHI inhibits both activities of tyrosinase—tyrosine-hydroxylation and DOPA-oxidation—more strongly than DHICA. The different extent of inhibition is shown to reflect i) the ability of the two monomers to compete with tyrosinase substrates for the enzyme's active center and ii) the rate of interaction between melanin monomers and DOPAquinone. Consequently, we demonstrate that the tyrosinase-catalyzed DOPAchrome formation can be modulated by the ratio of DHICA/DHI among melanin monomers with the increased proportion of DHICA resulting in more efficient DOPAchrome formation. These results raise the possibility that DOPAchrome tautomerase plays a role in positive control of the tyrosinase-catalyzed early phase of melanogenesis.  相似文献   

18.
Tyrosinase related protein‐1 (TRP‐1) is a melanocyte‐specific gene product involved in eumelanin synthesis. Mutation in the Tyrp1 gene is associated with brown pelage in mouse and oculocutaneous albinism Type 3 in humans (OCA3). It has been demonstrated that TRP‐1 expresses DHICA oxidase activity in the murine system. However, its actual function in the human system is still unclear. The study was designed to determine the effects of mutation at two Typr1 alleles, namely the Tyrp1b (brown) and Tyrp1b‐cj (cordovan) compared with wild type Tyrp1B (black) on melanocyte function and melanin biosynthesis. The most significant finding was that both of the Tyrp1 mutations (i.e. brown expressing a point mutation and cordovan expressing decreased amount of TRP‐1 protein) resulted in attenuation of cell proliferation rates. Neither necrosis nor apoptosis was responsible for the observed decrease in cell proliferation rates of the brown and cordovan melanocytes. Ultrastructural evaluation by electron microscopic analysis revealed that both mutations in Tyrp1 affected melanosome maturation without affecting its structure. These observations demonstrate that mutation in Tyrp1 compromised tyrosinase activity within the organelle. DOPA histochemistry revealed differences in melanosomal stages between black and brown melanocytes but not between black and cordovan melanocytes. There were no significant differences in tyrosine hydroxylase activities of tyrosinase and TRP‐1 in wild type black, brown and cordovan melanocyte cell lysates. We conclude that mutations in Tyrp1 compromise cell proliferation and melanosomal maturation in mouse melanocyte cultures.  相似文献   

19.
The color of hair and wool in mammals and feathers in birds is mostly determined by the quantity and quality of melanins that are synthesized in follicular melanocytes and transferred to keratinocytes. There are two chemically distinct types of melanin pigments: the black to brown eumelanins and the yellow to reddish pheomelanins. Melanins in sheep wool and human hair of various colors were characterized by HPLC methods to estimate 5,6-dihydroxyindole-2-carboxylic acid (DHICA)-derived units in eumelanins and benzothiazine units in pheomelanins. Melanins were also characterized by spectrophotometric methods after differential solubilization in alkalies. It was demonstrated that 1) black wool in Asiatic sheep contains eumelanin with the DHICA content similar to black mouse melanin, while black to brown melanins from human hair contain much lower ratios of DHICA-derived units, comparable to the slaty mutation in mice, 2) dark brown to brown hair in human contains eumelanin whose chemical properties are indistinguishable from those of black hair, 3) dark red wool and red human hair contain pheomelanic pigments whose chemical properties are rather different from those of yellow pheomelanins in mice, and 4) light brown, blonde, and red hairs in human can be differentiated from each other with this methodology.  相似文献   

20.
Melanocytes originate from the neural crest in vertebrates and migrate to the body surface where they differentiate into functional cells. Genes involved in melanocyte differentiation can be classified into two groups. One of them consists of the functional genes that control proteins specific to the function of the melanocyte. As the representative gene of this category, albino (c) locus in the mouse is considered to control tyrosinase, the key enzyme in melanogenesis. cDNA for mouse tyrosinase has been cloned and sequenced. The cDNA can be used to detect tyrosinase mRNA synthesized during melanocyte differentiation. On the other hand, genes such as brown (b) or pink-eyed dilution (p) have been assumed to control melanosome proteins. The other category consists of genes that regulate the expression of these functional genes directly or indirectly. In the mouse, so-called white-spotting genes and genes of the agouti series are considered to fall into this category. Based on the fact that mutations at the white-spotting loci result in the absence of melanocytes in a particular area of skin, it is assumed that some of these loci control the factors that promote either differentiation or migration of melanoblasts and are candidates for the classic regulator genes Genes at the agouti (a) locus in the mouse determine the type of melanin synthesized in hair follicle melanocytes, that is eumelanin or pheomelanin. An interesting feature of this locus is that the site of gene action is not within the melanocytes but in the cells surrounding them. The results of our study indicate that the gene product of the a-locus interacts with α-MSH at the α-MSH receptor site, regulates the cellular cAMP level via a signal transduction system and, in turn, determines the type of melanin synthesized in the cells.  相似文献   

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