- Tetrahydrofolic Acid is a potent suicide substrate of mushroom tyrosinase.
Tetrahydrofolic Acid is a potent suicide substrate of mushroom tyrosinase.
The coenzyme tetrahydrofolic acid is the most rapid suicide substrate of tyrosinase that has been characterized to date. A kinetic study of the suicide inactivation process provides the kinetic constants that characterize it: λ(max), the maximum apparent inactivation constant; r, the partition ratio or the number of turnovers made by one enzyme molecule before inactivation; and k(cat) and K(m), the catalytic and Michaelis constants, respectively. From these values, it is possible to establish the ratio λ(max)/K(m), which represents the potency of the inactivation process. Besides acting as a suicide substrate of tyrosinase, tetrahydrofolic acid reduces o-quinones generated by the enzyme in its action on substrates, such as l-tyrosine and l-DOPA (o-dopaquinone), thus inhibiting enzymatic browning.