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Melanins

PubChem CID: 6325610

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Compound Synonyms Melanin, 8049-97-6, Melanin from Sepia officinalis, Melanins, 6,14-dimethyl-4,12-diazapentacyclo[8.6.1.12,5.013,17.09,18]octadeca-1(17),2,5,9(18),10,13-hexaene-7,8,15,16-tetrone, 6,14-dimethyl-4,12-diazapentacyclo[8.6.1.1^{2,5}.0^{13,17}.0^{9,18}]octadeca-1(17),2,5,9(18),10,13-hexaene-7,8,15,16-tetrone, Phaeomelanins, Melanin synthetic, Melanin - natural, Melanin, synthetic, 6,14-dimethyl-4,12-diazapentacyclo(8.6.1.1^(2,5).0^(13,17).0^(9,18))octadeca-1(17),2,5,9(18),10,13-hexaene-7,8,15,16-tetrone, 6,14-dimethyl-4,12-diazapentacyclo(8.6.1.12,5.013,17.09,18)octadeca-1(17),2,5,9(18),10,13-hexaene-7,8,15,16-tetrone, EINECS 232-473-6, GTPL5415, CHEMBL4283875, CHEBI:25179, CHEBI:89634, DTXSID301001278, FM67974, AS-88110, XM679856, G86343, Q27084224, 232-473-6
Ghose Rule True
Classyfire Kingdom Organic compounds
Topological Polar Surface Area 92.3
Hydrogen Bond Donor Count 2.0
Pfizer 3 75 Rule True
Scaffold Graph Level CC1CC2CCC3C2C(C1C)C1CCC2CC(C)C(C)C3C21
Deep Smiles Ccc[nH]ccc5cc=O)c9=O)))cc[nH]cc5c9c=O)c=O)c6C
Heavy Atom Count 24.0
Pathway Kegg Map Id map00350
Classyfire Class Anthracenes
Description Dermal melanin is produced by melanocytes, which are found in the stratum basale of the epidermis. Although human beings generally possess a similar concentration of melanocytes in their skin, the melanocytes in some individuals and races more frequently or less frequently express the melanin-producing genes, thereby conferring a greater or lesser concentration of skin melanin. Some individual animals and humans have no or very little melanin in their bodies, which is a condition known as albinism. Higher eumelanin levels also can be a disadvantage, however, beyond a higher disposition toward vitamin D deficiency. Dark skin is a complicating factor in the laser removal of port-wine stains. Effective in treating fair skin, lasers generally are less successful in removing port-wine stains in Asians and people of African descent. Higher concentrations of melanin in darker-skinned individuals simply diffuse and absorb the laser radiation, inhibiting light absorption by the targeted tissue. Melanin similarly can complicate laser treatment of other dermatological conditions in people with darker skin. Under the microscope melanin is brown, non-refractile and finely granular with individual granules having a diameter of less than 800 nanometers. This differentiates melanin from common blood breakdown pigments which are larger, chunky and refractile and range in color from green to yellow or red-brown. In heavily pigmented lesions, dense aggregates of melanin can obscure histologic detail. A dilute solution of potassium permanganate is an effective melanin bleach. Pigments causing darkness in skin, hair, feathers, etc. They are irregular polymeric structures and are divided into three groups: allomelanins in the plant kingdom and eumelanins and phaeomelanins in the animal kingdom. When skin pigmentation as a characteristic of race is linked to social status or other human attributes, this phenomenon is known as racialism. Many people and societies overlay racialism with racist perceptions and systems which arbitrarily assign to groups of people a status of inherent superiority or inferiority, privilege or disadvantage based on skin color or racial classification. Apartheid-era South Africa is an example of a white supremacist society based on a system of stratification of power and privilege by skin color, as well as racial admixture. Similar examples can be found in Brazil's highly socially color-stratified society, and, in the U.S., segregation and institutional racism on the part of white-controlled and black-controlled institutions, and internal 'color consciousness' on the part of some ethnic minorities. Prejudice against people with more highly pigmented skin is the most pervasive form of color bias. Many other societies remain informally divided on the basis of skin color and, often, related ethnicity. (See also colonialism, Nazism, pigmentocracy and institutional racism.) Because melanin is an aggregate of smaller component molecules, there are a number of different types of melanin with differing proportions and bonding patterns of these component molecules. Both pheomelanin and eumelanin are found in human skin and hair, but eumelanin is the most abundant melanin in humans, as well as the form most likely to be deficient in albinism. Freckles and moles are formed where there is a localized concentration of melanin in the skin. They are highly associated with pale skin. Melanin is a biopolymer and a neuropeptide. In the early 1970s, John McGinness, Peter Corry, and Peter Proctor reported that melanin is a high-conductivity organic semiconductor (Science, vol 183, 853-855 (1974)). Studies revealed that melanin acted as a voltage-controlled solid-state threshold switch. Further, it emitting a flash of light electroluminescence when it switched. There are approximately ten different types of oculocutaneous albinism, which is mostly an autosomal recessive disorder. Certain ethnicities have higher incidences of different forms. For example, the most common type, called oculocutaneous albinism type 2 (OCA2), is especially frequent among people of indigenous African descent. It is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by a congenital reduction or absence of melanin pigment in the skin, hair and eyes. The estimated frequency of OCA2 among African-Americans is 1 in 10,000, which contrasts with a frequency of 1 in 36,000 in white Americans . In some African nations, the frequency of the disorder is even higher, ranging from 1 in 2,000 to 1 in 5,000. Another form of Albinism, the 'yellow oculocutaneous albinism', appears to be more prevalent among the Amish, who are of primarily Swiss and German ancestry. People with this IB variant of the disorder commonly have white hair and skin at birth, but rapidly develop normal skin pigmentation in infancy. Broadly, melanin is any of the polyacetylene, polyaniline, and polypyrrole 'blacks' and "browns" or their mixed copolymers. The most common form of biological melanin is a polymer of either or both of two monomer molecules: indolequinone, and dihydroxyindole carboxylic acid. In contrast, some fungal melanin is polyacetylene black. Melanin exists in the plant, animal and protista kingdoms, where it serves as a pigment. The presence of melanin in the archaea and bacteria kingdoms is an issue of ongoing debate amongst researchers in the field. [HMDB]
Scaffold Graph Node Level OC1CC2NCC3C2C(C1O)C1CNC2CC(O)C(O)C3C21
Isotope Atom Count 0.0
Molecular Complexity 984.0
Database Name cmaup_ingredients;fooddb_chem_all;hmdb_chem_all;imppat_phytochem;npass_chem_all;pubchem
Defined Atom Stereocenter Count 0.0
Uniprot Id P17643, Q04671
Iupac Name 6,14-dimethyl-4,12-diazapentacyclo[8.6.1.12,5.013,17.09,18]octadeca-1(17),2,5,9(18),10,13-hexaene-7,8,15,16-tetrone
Prediction Hob 1.0
Class Anthracenes
Veber Rule True
Classyfire Superclass Benzenoids
Xlogp -1.2
Superclass Benzenoids
Gsk 4 400 Rule True
Molecular Formula C18H10N2O4
Scaffold Graph Node Bond Level O=c1cc2[nH]cc3c4c(=O)c(=O)cc5[nH]cc(c(c1=O)c23)c54
Prediction Swissadme 0.0
Inchi Key XUMBMVFBXHLACL-UHFFFAOYSA-N
Silicos It Class Poorly soluble
Fcsp3 0.1111111111111111
Logs -6.095
Rotatable Bond Count 0.0
State Solid
Logd 0.459
Synonyms Allomelanins, Melanins, Phaeomelanins, melanin
Esol Class Very soluble
Functional Groups c=O, c[nH]c
Compound Name Melanins
Kingdom Organic compounds
Prediction Hob Swissadme 0.0
Exact Mass 318.064
Formal Charge 0.0
Monoisotopic Mass 318.064
Hydrogen Bond Acceptor Count 6.0
Molecular Weight 318.3
Gi Absorption True
Covalent Unit Count 1.0
Total Atom Stereocenter Count 0.0
Total Bond Stereocenter Count 0.0
Molecular Framework Aromatic heteropolycyclic compounds
Lipinski Rule Of 5 True
Esol -6.6145856
Inchi InChI=1S/C18H10N2O4/c1-5-13-9-7(3-19-13)12-10-8(11(9)17(23)15(5)21)4-20-14(10)6(2)16(22)18(12)24/h3-4,19-20H,1-2H3
Smiles CC1=C2C3=C(C4=CNC5=C(C(=O)C(=O)C(=C45)C3=CN2)C)C(=O)C1=O
Nring 5.0
Np Classifier Biosynthetic Pathway Alkaloids
Defined Bond Stereocenter Count 0.0
Egan Rule True
Taxonomy Direct Parent Anthracenes

  • 1. Outgoing r'ship FOUND_IN to/from Dalbergia Odorifera (Plant) Rel Props:Source_db:cmaup_ingredients;npass_chem_all
  • 2. Outgoing r'ship FOUND_IN to/from Luffa Aegyptiaca (Plant) Rel Props:Source_db:cmaup_ingredients;npass_chem_all
  • 3. Outgoing r'ship FOUND_IN to/from Luffa Cylindrica (Plant) Rel Props:Source_db:npass_chem_all
  • 4. Outgoing r'ship FOUND_IN to/from Pamburus Missionis (Plant) Rel Props:Source_db:npass_chem_all
  • 5. Outgoing r'ship FOUND_IN to/from Pithecellobium Dulce (Plant) Rel Props:Source_db:npass_chem_all
  • 6. Outgoing r'ship FOUND_IN to/from Vaccaria Hispanica (Plant) Rel Props:Source_db:cmaup_ingredients;npass_chem_all
  • 7. Outgoing r'ship FOUND_IN to/from Zingiber Montanum (Plant) Rel Props:Source_db:npass_chem_all