Melanins: Skin Pigments and Much More—Types, Structural Models, Biological Functions, and Formation Routes
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Abstract
This review presents a general view of all types of melanin in all types of organisms. Melanin is frequently considered just an animal cutaneous pigment and is treated separately from similar fungal or bacterial pigments. Similarities concerning the phenol precursors and common patterns in the formation routes are discussed. All melanins are formed in a first enzymatically-controlled phase, generally a phenolase, and a second phase characterized by an uncontrolled polymerization of the oxidized intermediates. In that second phase, quinones derived from phenol oxidation play a crucial role. Concerning functions, all melanins show a common feature, a protective role, but they are not merely photoprotective…
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558
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1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Melanin
- Pigment
- Chemistry
- Biochemistry
- Biology
- Biophysics
- Organic chemistry
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