Development of chemometric-assisted supercritical fluid extraction of effective and natural tyrosinase inhibitor from Syzygium aqueum leaves

Tyrosinase is a key enzyme in enzymatic browning, causing quality losses in food through the oxidation process. Thus, the discovery of an effective and natural tyrosinase inhibitor via green technology is of great interest to the global food market due to food security and climate change issues. In...

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Published in:INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES
Main Authors: Zarudin, Nurul Husna; Normaya, Erna; Shamsuri, Syamimi Sulfiza; Iqbal, Anwar; Piah, Mohd Bijarimi Mat; Abdullah, Zanariah; Hamzah, Ahmad Sazali; Ahmad, Mohammad Norazmi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ELSEVIER 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001153701400001
author Zarudin
Nurul Husna; Normaya
Erna; Shamsuri
Syamimi Sulfiza; Iqbal
Anwar; Piah
Mohd Bijarimi Mat; Abdullah
Zanariah; Hamzah
Ahmad Sazali; Ahmad
Mohammad Norazmi
spellingShingle Zarudin
Nurul Husna; Normaya
Erna; Shamsuri
Syamimi Sulfiza; Iqbal
Anwar; Piah
Mohd Bijarimi Mat; Abdullah
Zanariah; Hamzah
Ahmad Sazali; Ahmad
Mohammad Norazmi
Development of chemometric-assisted supercritical fluid extraction of effective and natural tyrosinase inhibitor from Syzygium aqueum leaves
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology; Chemistry; Polymer Science
author_facet Zarudin
Nurul Husna; Normaya
Erna; Shamsuri
Syamimi Sulfiza; Iqbal
Anwar; Piah
Mohd Bijarimi Mat; Abdullah
Zanariah; Hamzah
Ahmad Sazali; Ahmad
Mohammad Norazmi
author_sort Zarudin
spelling Zarudin, Nurul Husna; Normaya, Erna; Shamsuri, Syamimi Sulfiza; Iqbal, Anwar; Piah, Mohd Bijarimi Mat; Abdullah, Zanariah; Hamzah, Ahmad Sazali; Ahmad, Mohammad Norazmi
Development of chemometric-assisted supercritical fluid extraction of effective and natural tyrosinase inhibitor from Syzygium aqueum leaves
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES
English
Article
Tyrosinase is a key enzyme in enzymatic browning, causing quality losses in food through the oxidation process. Thus, the discovery of an effective and natural tyrosinase inhibitor via green technology is of great interest to the global food market due to food security and climate change issues. In this study, Syzygium aqueum (S. aqueum) leaves, which are known to be rich in phenolic compounds (PC), were chosen as a natural source of tyrosinase inhibitor, and the effect of the sustainable, supercritical fluid extraction (SFE) process was evaluated. Response surface methodology-assisted supercritical fluid extraction (RSM-assisted SFE) was utilized to optimize the PCs extracted from S. aqueum. The highest amount of PC was obtained at the optimum conditions (55 degrees C, 3350 psi, and 70 min). The IC50 (661.815 mu g/mL) of the optimized extract was evaluated, and its antioxidant activity (96.8 %) was determined. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) results reveal that 2 ',6 '-dihydroxy-4 '-methoxychalcone (2,6-D4MC) (82.65 %) was the major PC in S. aqueum. Chemometric analysis indicated that 2,6-D4MC has similar chemical properties to the tyrosinase inhibitor control (kaempferol). The toxicity and physiochemical properties of the novel 2,6-D4MC from S. aqueum revealed that the 2,6-D4MC is safer than kaempferol as predicted via absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME) evaluation. Enzyme kinetic analysis shows that the type of inhibition of the optimized extract is non-competitive inhibition with Km = 1.55 mM and Vmax = 0.017 mu M/s. High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis shows the effectiveness of S. aqueum as a tyrosinase inhibitor. The mechanistic insight of the tyrosinase inhibition using 2,6-D4MC was successfully calculated using density functional theory (DFT) and molecular docking approaches. The findings could have a significant impact on food security development by devising a sustainable and effective tyrosinase inhibitor from waste by-products that is aligned with the United Nation's SDG 2, zero hunger.
ELSEVIER
0141-8130
1879-0003
2024
258

10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2023.129168
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology; Chemistry; Polymer Science

WOS:001153701400001
https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001153701400001
title Development of chemometric-assisted supercritical fluid extraction of effective and natural tyrosinase inhibitor from Syzygium aqueum leaves
title_short Development of chemometric-assisted supercritical fluid extraction of effective and natural tyrosinase inhibitor from Syzygium aqueum leaves
title_full Development of chemometric-assisted supercritical fluid extraction of effective and natural tyrosinase inhibitor from Syzygium aqueum leaves
title_fullStr Development of chemometric-assisted supercritical fluid extraction of effective and natural tyrosinase inhibitor from Syzygium aqueum leaves
title_full_unstemmed Development of chemometric-assisted supercritical fluid extraction of effective and natural tyrosinase inhibitor from Syzygium aqueum leaves
title_sort Development of chemometric-assisted supercritical fluid extraction of effective and natural tyrosinase inhibitor from Syzygium aqueum leaves
container_title INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES
language English
format Article
description Tyrosinase is a key enzyme in enzymatic browning, causing quality losses in food through the oxidation process. Thus, the discovery of an effective and natural tyrosinase inhibitor via green technology is of great interest to the global food market due to food security and climate change issues. In this study, Syzygium aqueum (S. aqueum) leaves, which are known to be rich in phenolic compounds (PC), were chosen as a natural source of tyrosinase inhibitor, and the effect of the sustainable, supercritical fluid extraction (SFE) process was evaluated. Response surface methodology-assisted supercritical fluid extraction (RSM-assisted SFE) was utilized to optimize the PCs extracted from S. aqueum. The highest amount of PC was obtained at the optimum conditions (55 degrees C, 3350 psi, and 70 min). The IC50 (661.815 mu g/mL) of the optimized extract was evaluated, and its antioxidant activity (96.8 %) was determined. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) results reveal that 2 ',6 '-dihydroxy-4 '-methoxychalcone (2,6-D4MC) (82.65 %) was the major PC in S. aqueum. Chemometric analysis indicated that 2,6-D4MC has similar chemical properties to the tyrosinase inhibitor control (kaempferol). The toxicity and physiochemical properties of the novel 2,6-D4MC from S. aqueum revealed that the 2,6-D4MC is safer than kaempferol as predicted via absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME) evaluation. Enzyme kinetic analysis shows that the type of inhibition of the optimized extract is non-competitive inhibition with Km = 1.55 mM and Vmax = 0.017 mu M/s. High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis shows the effectiveness of S. aqueum as a tyrosinase inhibitor. The mechanistic insight of the tyrosinase inhibition using 2,6-D4MC was successfully calculated using density functional theory (DFT) and molecular docking approaches. The findings could have a significant impact on food security development by devising a sustainable and effective tyrosinase inhibitor from waste by-products that is aligned with the United Nation's SDG 2, zero hunger.
publisher ELSEVIER
issn 0141-8130
1879-0003
publishDate 2024
container_volume 258
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2023.129168
topic Biochemistry & Molecular Biology; Chemistry; Polymer Science
topic_facet Biochemistry & Molecular Biology; Chemistry; Polymer Science
accesstype
id WOS:001153701400001
url https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001153701400001
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