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MAMMALIAN PIGMENTATIONThe Problem of the Pigmentary Mechanism Studied by Means of the Respiration of Tissues
HERMAN SHARLIT, M.D.;
ELSIE M. WALTER, M.A.
Arch Derm Syphilol. 1946;54(5):538-542.
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THE MECHANISM of pigmentation in the lower animals has been fairly well established. Some of the precursors of the melanin compounds have been isolated, and the enzyme tyrosinase has frequently been identified in extracts from tissues of these lower animals. In them, it is thought that the formation of melanin proceeds from the naturally occurring amino acid tyrosine and involves enzymatic catalysis, with tyrosinase as the active enzyme. Raper and Evans1 gave a logical series of enzymatic and chemical reactions for the pigmentation mechanism.
However, tyrosinase has rarely been isolated from pigmented tissues of mammals, with the result that considerable confusion exists concerning the enzyme active in mammalian pigmentation. Bloch's2 extensive work on the pigmentary mechanism in the human being led many to favor his theory of the existence of a special oxidase (dopase)-producing melanin in human beings by action on a prepigment l
. . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]
Author Affiliations
NEW YORK
From the Skin and Cancer Unit, New York Post-Graduate Medical School and Hospital, Columbia University, and the Institutum Divi Thomae, Cincinnati.
Footnotes
This research was made possible partly through a grant from The Doctor Simon Baruch Fund.
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