Welcome to the ultimate men’s self-improvement community where like-minded individuals come together to level up every aspect of their lives. Whether it’s building confidence, improving your mindset, optimizing health, or mastering aesthetics, this is the place to become the best version of yourself. Join the hood and start your transformation today.
DISCLAIMER / READ BEFORE TRYING I need to make this completely clear before any of you start megadosing supplements or changing your stacks: Whatever you do with this information, and whatever results you get, is 100% on you. If you crash your copper levels, mess up your immune system with zinc, or ruin your skin barrier, blame yourself. You are responsible for your own biology.
I first stumbled onto the mechanics of tyrosinase inhibition in high school biology class when we were learning about enzyme pathways and rate-limiting catalysts. It clicked with me how much control this enzyme has over pigmentation, so I spent hours doing my own deep-dive research into medical journals and dermatological studies to compile this data.
I don’t know if anyone has talked about this on here or nah and honesty im too lazy to search
This is not medical advice. I am a guy on a forum, not your doctor.
Intro
A lot of guys on here focus purely on bone structure (bimax, lefort, infraorbitals), but completely overlook chromatic contrast. Lighter features specifically skin tone, lip color, and hair/eye undertones can drastically alter your perceived contrast, shifting you from a high-contrast look to a softer, more harmonious aesthetic depending on your current coloring and goals. Bassicly jbw niggas
If you want to lighten your features safely from a biochemical level, you need to understand tyrosinase.
What is Tyrosinase and Why Does it Matter?
Tyrosinase is the primary rate-limiting enzyme responsible for melanogenesis (the production of melanin).
When your body consumes the amino acid L-Tyrosine, tyrosinase converts it into DOPA, then DOPAquinone, which eventually splits into:
1. Eumelanin: Dark brown/black pigment.
2. Pheomelanin: Yellow/red pigment.
By systematically inhibiting the tyrosinase enzyme and reducing your intake of its precursor, you effectively downregulate the body's ability to produce dark pigment. This results in a systemic, gradual lightening of the skin, lips, and overall complexion.
Phase 1: Dietary Downregulation (The Intake) You cannot completely eliminate tyrosine from your diet because it is a vital amino acid, but you can optimize your intake to minimize melanin synthesis.
Reduce High-Tyrosine Staples: High-protein foods like soy protein isolate, turkey, egg whites, and certain cheeses (parmesan) are packed with tyrosine. Shift your protein sources toward balanced profiles and avoid over-consuming these specific triggers.
The Copper Connection: Tyrosinase is a copper-dependent enzyme. Without copper, the enzyme cannot function. If you have a diet extremely high in copper (beef liver, dark chocolate, shellfish), your tyrosinase activity is running at 100%. Zinc Supplementation: Zinc competes with copper for absorption in the gut. Supplementing with a moderate, safe dose of Zinc (e.g., 15–30 mg daily) can help lower systemic copper levels, effectively starving the tyrosinase enzyme of its primary catalyst.
Phase 2: Systemic Inhibitors (Oral Supplements) Dietary restriction alone isn't enough to make a noticeable aesthetic difference. You need to introduce oral inhibitors that actively block the enzyme's binding sites. Glutathione (The Holy Grail of Systemic Lightening): Glutathione doesn't just inhibit tyrosinase; it actively switches melanin production from eumelanin (dark) to pheomelanin (light/yellow/red).
Note: Oral Glutathione has poor bioavailability. Use Liposomal Glutathione or its precursor, N-Acetyl Cysteine (NAC) combined with Vitamin C, to raise intracellular levels. MSM (Methylsulfonylmethane): MSM increases intracellular glutathione levels and acts as a mild tyrosinase inhibitor. It's widely used in the community for clearing up skin clarity and dropping the skin tone by a few shades over a multi-month timeline. High-Dose Vitamin C: Vitamin C acts as a potent antioxidant that reduces DOPAquinone back to DOPA, halting the pigmentation process midway.
Phase 3: Targeted Topical Attack To see the fastest results in specific areas like achieving pinker/lighter lips or brighter, more even facial skin you need to apply topical inhibitors directly to the target tissue.
| Ingredient | Mechanism of Action | Effectiveness |
| Alpha Arbutin (2%) | A clean, stable derivative of hydroquinone. Safely binds to tyrosinase to block melanin synthesis without the toxicity risks. | High (Safe for long-term use) |
| Kojic Acid | A fungal derivative that chelates (binds) the copper atoms inside the tyrosinase enzyme, rendering it useless. | High (Can be drying) |
| Azelaic Acid (15-20%) | Selectively targets and inhibits hyperactive melanocytes. Great for overall skin brightness and texture maxing. | Medium-High |
| Licorice Root Extract | Contains glabridin, which inhibits tyrosinase activity by up to 50% without damaging skin cells. | Medium (Great for stacking) |
The Stack: How to Protocol This If you want real results, you have to stack these methods synergistically.
Morning: Apply Alpha Arbutin or Azelaic Acid to target areas + wear SPF 50 (UV radiation instantly triggers tyrosinase, destroying all your progress).
Evening: Take 1000mg NAC + 1000mg Vitamin C + 15mg Zinc.
Diet Keep copper intake in check; don't megadose foods that trigger high melanin synthesis.
Summary / TL;DR (for "dnr"ers)
Lowering your features' darkness isn't just about avoiding the sun. By dropping your copper levels (which activates tyrosinase), supplementing with NAC/Glutathione to force a pheomelanin shift, and applying copper-chelating topicals like Kojic Acid or Arbutin, you can systematically lower your melanin baseline.
Always do your own bloodwork before messing with heavy zinc/copper ratios. Let me know if you guys want a breakdown on the exact timelines for lip/skin shedding cycles.
Chen, J. (0). Zinc-copper bimetallic organic framework nanosheets for synergistic treatment of vitiligo by inhibiting oxidative stress and promoting melanin production. Zinc-copper bimetallic organic framework nanosheets for synergistic treatment of vitiligo by inhibiting oxidative stress and promoting melanin production - PMC.
Chung, B., Choi, S., Moon, I., Park, C., Kim, Y.-H., & Chang, S. (2016). The Glutathione Derivative, GSH Monoethyl Ester, May Effectively Whiten Skin but GSH Does Not. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 17(5), 629. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms17050629 Cited by: 48
Erler, S. (0). Targeting Melanin Production: The Safety of Tyrosinase Inhibition. Targeting Melanin Production: The Safety of Tyrosinase Inhibition - MDPI.
Cited by: 1
Lu, Y., F. Tonissen, K., & Di Trapani, G. (2021). Modulating skin colour: role of the thioredoxin and glutathione systems in regulating melanogenesis. Bioscience Reports, 41. https://doi.org/10.1042/bsr20210427 Cited by: 90
Pillaiyar, T., Manickam, M., & Namasivayam, V. (2017). Skin whitening agents: medicinal chemistry perspective of tyrosinase inhibitors. Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry, 32(1), 403-425. https://doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2016.1256882 Cited by: 1151
Wagatsuma, T., et al. (2023). Melanin biosynthesis requires zinc in addition to copper — Findings by Kyoto University overturn dogma of over 70 years and give hints at the composition of whitening cosmetics. Communications Biology. https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-04640-5 Zolghadri, S., Bahrami, A., Hassan Khan, M. T., Munoz-Munoz, J., Garcia-Molina, F., Garcia-Canovas, F., & Saboury, A. A. (2019). A comprehensive review on tyrosinase inhibitors. Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry, 34(1), 279-309. https://doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2018.1545767 Cited by: 1266
DISCLAIMER / READ BEFORE TRYING I need to make this completely clear before any of you start megadosing supplements or changing your stacks: Whatever you do with this information, and whatever results you get, is 100% on you. If you crash your copper levels, mess up your immune system with zinc, or ruin your skin barrier, blame yourself. You are responsible for your own biology.
I first stumbled onto the mechanics of tyrosinase inhibition in high school biology class when we were learning about enzyme pathways and rate-limiting catalysts. It clicked with me how much control this enzyme has over pigmentation, so I spent hours doing my own deep-dive research into medical journals and dermatological studies to compile this data.
I don’t know if anyone has talked about this on here or nah and honesty im too lazy to search
This is not medical advice. I am a guy on a forum, not your doctor.
Intro
A lot of guys on here focus purely on bone structure (bimax, lefort, infraorbitals), but completely overlook chromatic contrast. Lighter features specifically skin tone, lip color, and hair/eye undertones can drastically alter your perceived contrast, shifting you from a high-contrast look to a softer, more harmonious aesthetic depending on your current coloring and goals. Bassicly jbw niggas
If you want to lighten your features safely from a biochemical level, you need to understand tyrosinase.
What is Tyrosinase and Why Does it Matter?
Tyrosinase is the primary rate-limiting enzyme responsible for melanogenesis (the production of melanin).
When your body consumes the amino acid L-Tyrosine, tyrosinase converts it into DOPA, then DOPAquinone, which eventually splits into:
1. Eumelanin: Dark brown/black pigment.
2. Pheomelanin: Yellow/red pigment.
By systematically inhibiting the tyrosinase enzyme and reducing your intake of its precursor, you effectively downregulate the body's ability to produce dark pigment. This results in a systemic, gradual lightening of the skin, lips, and overall complexion.
Phase 1: Dietary Downregulation (The Intake) You cannot completely eliminate tyrosine from your diet because it is a vital amino acid, but you can optimize your intake to minimize melanin synthesis.
Reduce High-Tyrosine Staples: High-protein foods like soy protein isolate, turkey, egg whites, and certain cheeses (parmesan) are packed with tyrosine. Shift your protein sources toward balanced profiles and avoid over-consuming these specific triggers.
The Copper Connection: Tyrosinase is a copper-dependent enzyme. Without copper, the enzyme cannot function. If you have a diet extremely high in copper (beef liver, dark chocolate, shellfish), your tyrosinase activity is running at 100%. Zinc Supplementation: Zinc competes with copper for absorption in the gut. Supplementing with a moderate, safe dose of Zinc (e.g., 15–30 mg daily) can help lower systemic copper levels, effectively starving the tyrosinase enzyme of its primary catalyst.
Phase 2: Systemic Inhibitors (Oral Supplements) Dietary restriction alone isn't enough to make a noticeable aesthetic difference. You need to introduce oral inhibitors that actively block the enzyme's binding sites. Glutathione (The Holy Grail of Systemic Lightening): Glutathione doesn't just inhibit tyrosinase; it actively switches melanin production from eumelanin (dark) to pheomelanin (light/yellow/red).
Note: Oral Glutathione has poor bioavailability. Use Liposomal Glutathione or its precursor, N-Acetyl Cysteine (NAC) combined with Vitamin C, to raise intracellular levels. MSM (Methylsulfonylmethane): MSM increases intracellular glutathione levels and acts as a mild tyrosinase inhibitor. It's widely used in the community for clearing up skin clarity and dropping the skin tone by a few shades over a multi-month timeline. High-Dose Vitamin C: Vitamin C acts as a potent antioxidant that reduces DOPAquinone back to DOPA, halting the pigmentation process midway.
Phase 3: Targeted Topical Attack To see the fastest results in specific areas like achieving pinker/lighter lips or brighter, more even facial skin you need to apply topical inhibitors directly to the target tissue.
| Ingredient | Mechanism of Action | Effectiveness |
| Alpha Arbutin (2%) | A clean, stable derivative of hydroquinone. Safely binds to tyrosinase to block melanin synthesis without the toxicity risks. | High (Safe for long-term use) |
| Kojic Acid | A fungal derivative that chelates (binds) the copper atoms inside the tyrosinase enzyme, rendering it useless. | High (Can be drying) |
| Azelaic Acid (15-20%) | Selectively targets and inhibits hyperactive melanocytes. Great for overall skin brightness and texture maxing. | Medium-High |
| Licorice Root Extract | Contains glabridin, which inhibits tyrosinase activity by up to 50% without damaging skin cells. | Medium (Great for stacking) |
The Stack: How to Protocol This If you want real results, you have to stack these methods synergistically.
Morning: Apply Alpha Arbutin or Azelaic Acid to target areas + wear SPF 50 (UV radiation instantly triggers tyrosinase, destroying all your progress).
Evening: Take 1000mg NAC + 1000mg Vitamin C + 15mg Zinc.
Diet Keep copper intake in check; don't megadose foods that trigger high melanin synthesis.
Summary / TL;DR (for "dnr"ers)
Lowering your features' darkness isn't just about avoiding the sun. By dropping your copper levels (which activates tyrosinase), supplementing with NAC/Glutathione to force a pheomelanin shift, and applying copper-chelating topicals like Kojic Acid or Arbutin, you can systematically lower your melanin baseline.
Always do your own bloodwork before messing with heavy zinc/copper ratios. Let me know if you guys want a breakdown on the exact timelines for lip/skin shedding cycles.
Chen, J. (0). Zinc-copper bimetallic organic framework nanosheets for synergistic treatment of vitiligo by inhibiting oxidative stress and promoting melanin production. Zinc-copper bimetallic organic framework nanosheets for synergistic treatment of vitiligo by inhibiting oxidative stress and promoting melanin production - PMC.
Chung, B., Choi, S., Moon, I., Park, C., Kim, Y.-H., & Chang, S. (2016). The Glutathione Derivative, GSH Monoethyl Ester, May Effectively Whiten Skin but GSH Does Not. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 17(5), 629. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms17050629 Cited by: 48
Erler, S. (0). Targeting Melanin Production: The Safety of Tyrosinase Inhibition. Targeting Melanin Production: The Safety of Tyrosinase Inhibition - MDPI.
Cited by: 1
Lu, Y., F. Tonissen, K., & Di Trapani, G. (2021). Modulating skin colour: role of the thioredoxin and glutathione systems in regulating melanogenesis. Bioscience Reports, 41. https://doi.org/10.1042/bsr20210427 Cited by: 90
Pillaiyar, T., Manickam, M., & Namasivayam, V. (2017). Skin whitening agents: medicinal chemistry perspective of tyrosinase inhibitors. Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry, 32(1), 403-425. https://doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2016.1256882 Cited by: 1151
Wagatsuma, T., et al. (2023). Melanin biosynthesis requires zinc in addition to copper — Findings by Kyoto University overturn dogma of over 70 years and give hints at the composition of whitening cosmetics. Communications Biology. https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-04640-5 Zolghadri, S., Bahrami, A., Hassan Khan, M. T., Munoz-Munoz, J., Garcia-Molina, F., Garcia-Canovas, F., & Saboury, A. A. (2019). A comprehensive review on tyrosinase inhibitors. Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry, 34(1), 279-309. https://doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2018.1545767 Cited by: 1266
DISCLAIMER / READ BEFORE TRYING I need to make this completely clear before any of you start megadosing supplements or changing your stacks: Whatever you do with this information, and whatever results you get, is 100% on you. If you crash your copper levels, mess up your immune system with zinc, or ruin your skin barrier, blame yourself. You are responsible for your own biology.
I first stumbled onto the mechanics of tyrosinase inhibition in high school biology class when we were learning about enzyme pathways and rate-limiting catalysts. It clicked with me how much control this enzyme has over pigmentation, so I spent hours doing my own deep-dive research into medical journals and dermatological studies to compile this data.
I don’t know if anyone has talked about this on here or nah and honesty im too lazy to search
This is not medical advice. I am a guy on a forum, not your doctor.
Intro
A lot of guys on here focus purely on bone structure (bimax, lefort, infraorbitals), but completely overlook chromatic contrast. Lighter features specifically skin tone, lip color, and hair/eye undertones can drastically alter your perceived contrast, shifting you from a high-contrast look to a softer, more harmonious aesthetic depending on your current coloring and goals. Bassicly jbw niggas
If you want to lighten your features safely from a biochemical level, you need to understand tyrosinase.
What is Tyrosinase and Why Does it Matter?
Tyrosinase is the primary rate-limiting enzyme responsible for melanogenesis (the production of melanin).
When your body consumes the amino acid L-Tyrosine, tyrosinase converts it into DOPA, then DOPAquinone, which eventually splits into:
1. Eumelanin: Dark brown/black pigment.
2. Pheomelanin: Yellow/red pigment.
By systematically inhibiting the tyrosinase enzyme and reducing your intake of its precursor, you effectively downregulate the body's ability to produce dark pigment. This results in a systemic, gradual lightening of the skin, lips, and overall complexion.
Phase 1: Dietary Downregulation (The Intake) You cannot completely eliminate tyrosine from your diet because it is a vital amino acid, but you can optimize your intake to minimize melanin synthesis.
Reduce High-Tyrosine Staples: High-protein foods like soy protein isolate, turkey, egg whites, and certain cheeses (parmesan) are packed with tyrosine. Shift your protein sources toward balanced profiles and avoid over-consuming these specific triggers.
The Copper Connection: Tyrosinase is a copper-dependent enzyme. Without copper, the enzyme cannot function. If you have a diet extremely high in copper (beef liver, dark chocolate, shellfish), your tyrosinase activity is running at 100%. Zinc Supplementation: Zinc competes with copper for absorption in the gut. Supplementing with a moderate, safe dose of Zinc (e.g., 15–30 mg daily) can help lower systemic copper levels, effectively starving the tyrosinase enzyme of its primary catalyst.
Phase 2: Systemic Inhibitors (Oral Supplements) Dietary restriction alone isn't enough to make a noticeable aesthetic difference. You need to introduce oral inhibitors that actively block the enzyme's binding sites. Glutathione (The Holy Grail of Systemic Lightening): Glutathione doesn't just inhibit tyrosinase; it actively switches melanin production from eumelanin (dark) to pheomelanin (light/yellow/red).
Note: Oral Glutathione has poor bioavailability. Use Liposomal Glutathione or its precursor, N-Acetyl Cysteine (NAC) combined with Vitamin C, to raise intracellular levels. MSM (Methylsulfonylmethane): MSM increases intracellular glutathione levels and acts as a mild tyrosinase inhibitor. It's widely used in the community for clearing up skin clarity and dropping the skin tone by a few shades over a multi-month timeline. High-Dose Vitamin C: Vitamin C acts as a potent antioxidant that reduces DOPAquinone back to DOPA, halting the pigmentation process midway.
Phase 3: Targeted Topical Attack To see the fastest results in specific areas like achieving pinker/lighter lips or brighter, more even facial skin you need to apply topical inhibitors directly to the target tissue.
| Ingredient | Mechanism of Action | Effectiveness |
| Alpha Arbutin (2%) | A clean, stable derivative of hydroquinone. Safely binds to tyrosinase to block melanin synthesis without the toxicity risks. | High (Safe for long-term use) |
| Kojic Acid | A fungal derivative that chelates (binds) the copper atoms inside the tyrosinase enzyme, rendering it useless. | High (Can be drying) |
| Azelaic Acid (15-20%) | Selectively targets and inhibits hyperactive melanocytes. Great for overall skin brightness and texture maxing. | Medium-High |
| Licorice Root Extract | Contains glabridin, which inhibits tyrosinase activity by up to 50% without damaging skin cells. | Medium (Great for stacking) |
The Stack: How to Protocol This If you want real results, you have to stack these methods synergistically.
Morning: Apply Alpha Arbutin or Azelaic Acid to target areas + wear SPF 50 (UV radiation instantly triggers tyrosinase, destroying all your progress).
Evening: Take 1000mg NAC + 1000mg Vitamin C + 15mg Zinc.
Diet Keep copper intake in check; don't megadose foods that trigger high melanin synthesis.
Summary / TL;DR (for "dnr"ers)
Lowering your features' darkness isn't just about avoiding the sun. By dropping your copper levels (which activates tyrosinase), supplementing with NAC/Glutathione to force a pheomelanin shift, and applying copper-chelating topicals like Kojic Acid or Arbutin, you can systematically lower your melanin baseline.
Always do your own bloodwork before messing with heavy zinc/copper ratios. Let me know if you guys want a breakdown on the exact timelines for lip/skin shedding cycles.
Chen, J. (0). Zinc-copper bimetallic organic framework nanosheets for synergistic treatment of vitiligo by inhibiting oxidative stress and promoting melanin production. Zinc-copper bimetallic organic framework nanosheets for synergistic treatment of vitiligo by inhibiting oxidative stress and promoting melanin production - PMC.
Chung, B., Choi, S., Moon, I., Park, C., Kim, Y.-H., & Chang, S. (2016). The Glutathione Derivative, GSH Monoethyl Ester, May Effectively Whiten Skin but GSH Does Not. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 17(5), 629. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms17050629 Cited by: 48
Erler, S. (0). Targeting Melanin Production: The Safety of Tyrosinase Inhibition. Targeting Melanin Production: The Safety of Tyrosinase Inhibition - MDPI.
Cited by: 1
Lu, Y., F. Tonissen, K., & Di Trapani, G. (2021). Modulating skin colour: role of the thioredoxin and glutathione systems in regulating melanogenesis. Bioscience Reports, 41. https://doi.org/10.1042/bsr20210427 Cited by: 90
Pillaiyar, T., Manickam, M., & Namasivayam, V. (2017). Skin whitening agents: medicinal chemistry perspective of tyrosinase inhibitors. Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry, 32(1), 403-425. https://doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2016.1256882 Cited by: 1151
Wagatsuma, T., et al. (2023). Melanin biosynthesis requires zinc in addition to copper — Findings by Kyoto University overturn dogma of over 70 years and give hints at the composition of whitening cosmetics. Communications Biology. https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-04640-5 Zolghadri, S., Bahrami, A., Hassan Khan, M. T., Munoz-Munoz, J., Garcia-Molina, F., Garcia-Canovas, F., & Saboury, A. A. (2019). A comprehensive review on tyrosinase inhibitors. Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry, 34(1), 279-309. https://doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2018.1545767 Cited by: 1266
DISCLAIMER / READ BEFORE TRYING I need to make this completely clear before any of you start megadosing supplements or changing your stacks: Whatever you do with this information, and whatever results you get, is 100% on you. If you crash your copper levels, mess up your immune system with zinc, or ruin your skin barrier, blame yourself. You are responsible for your own biology.
I first stumbled onto the mechanics of tyrosinase inhibition in high school biology class when we were learning about enzyme pathways and rate-limiting catalysts. It clicked with me how much control this enzyme has over pigmentation, so I spent hours doing my own deep-dive research into medical journals and dermatological studies to compile this data.
I don’t know if anyone has talked about this on here or nah and honesty im too lazy to search
This is not medical advice. I am a guy on a forum, not your doctor.
Intro
A lot of guys on here focus purely on bone structure (bimax, lefort, infraorbitals), but completely overlook chromatic contrast. Lighter features specifically skin tone, lip color, and hair/eye undertones can drastically alter your perceived contrast, shifting you from a high-contrast look to a softer, more harmonious aesthetic depending on your current coloring and goals. Bassicly jbw niggas
If you want to lighten your features safely from a biochemical level, you need to understand tyrosinase.
What is Tyrosinase and Why Does it Matter?
Tyrosinase is the primary rate-limiting enzyme responsible for melanogenesis (the production of melanin).
When your body consumes the amino acid L-Tyrosine, tyrosinase converts it into DOPA, then DOPAquinone, which eventually splits into:
1. Eumelanin: Dark brown/black pigment.
2. Pheomelanin: Yellow/red pigment.
By systematically inhibiting the tyrosinase enzyme and reducing your intake of its precursor, you effectively downregulate the body's ability to produce dark pigment. This results in a systemic, gradual lightening of the skin, lips, and overall complexion.
Phase 1: Dietary Downregulation (The Intake) You cannot completely eliminate tyrosine from your diet because it is a vital amino acid, but you can optimize your intake to minimize melanin synthesis.
Reduce High-Tyrosine Staples: High-protein foods like soy protein isolate, turkey, egg whites, and certain cheeses (parmesan) are packed with tyrosine. Shift your protein sources toward balanced profiles and avoid over-consuming these specific triggers.
The Copper Connection: Tyrosinase is a copper-dependent enzyme. Without copper, the enzyme cannot function. If you have a diet extremely high in copper (beef liver, dark chocolate, shellfish), your tyrosinase activity is running at 100%. Zinc Supplementation: Zinc competes with copper for absorption in the gut. Supplementing with a moderate, safe dose of Zinc (e.g., 15–30 mg daily) can help lower systemic copper levels, effectively starving the tyrosinase enzyme of its primary catalyst.
Phase 2: Systemic Inhibitors (Oral Supplements) Dietary restriction alone isn't enough to make a noticeable aesthetic difference. You need to introduce oral inhibitors that actively block the enzyme's binding sites. Glutathione (The Holy Grail of Systemic Lightening): Glutathione doesn't just inhibit tyrosinase; it actively switches melanin production from eumelanin (dark) to pheomelanin (light/yellow/red).
Note: Oral Glutathione has poor bioavailability. Use Liposomal Glutathione or its precursor, N-Acetyl Cysteine (NAC) combined with Vitamin C, to raise intracellular levels. MSM (Methylsulfonylmethane): MSM increases intracellular glutathione levels and acts as a mild tyrosinase inhibitor. It's widely used in the community for clearing up skin clarity and dropping the skin tone by a few shades over a multi-month timeline. High-Dose Vitamin C: Vitamin C acts as a potent antioxidant that reduces DOPAquinone back to DOPA, halting the pigmentation process midway.
Phase 3: Targeted Topical Attack To see the fastest results in specific areas like achieving pinker/lighter lips or brighter, more even facial skin you need to apply topical inhibitors directly to the target tissue.
| Ingredient | Mechanism of Action | Effectiveness |
| Alpha Arbutin (2%) | A clean, stable derivative of hydroquinone. Safely binds to tyrosinase to block melanin synthesis without the toxicity risks. | High (Safe for long-term use) |
| Kojic Acid | A fungal derivative that chelates (binds) the copper atoms inside the tyrosinase enzyme, rendering it useless. | High (Can be drying) |
| Azelaic Acid (15-20%) | Selectively targets and inhibits hyperactive melanocytes. Great for overall skin brightness and texture maxing. | Medium-High |
| Licorice Root Extract | Contains glabridin, which inhibits tyrosinase activity by up to 50% without damaging skin cells. | Medium (Great for stacking) |
The Stack: How to Protocol This If you want real results, you have to stack these methods synergistically.
Morning: Apply Alpha Arbutin or Azelaic Acid to target areas + wear SPF 50 (UV radiation instantly triggers tyrosinase, destroying all your progress).
Evening: Take 1000mg NAC + 1000mg Vitamin C + 15mg Zinc.
Diet Keep copper intake in check; don't megadose foods that trigger high melanin synthesis.
Summary / TL;DR (for "dnr"ers)
Lowering your features' darkness isn't just about avoiding the sun. By dropping your copper levels (which activates tyrosinase), supplementing with NAC/Glutathione to force a pheomelanin shift, and applying copper-chelating topicals like Kojic Acid or Arbutin, you can systematically lower your melanin baseline.
Always do your own bloodwork before messing with heavy zinc/copper ratios. Let me know if you guys want a breakdown on the exact timelines for lip/skin shedding cycles.
Chen, J. (0). Zinc-copper bimetallic organic framework nanosheets for synergistic treatment of vitiligo by inhibiting oxidative stress and promoting melanin production. Zinc-copper bimetallic organic framework nanosheets for synergistic treatment of vitiligo by inhibiting oxidative stress and promoting melanin production - PMC.
Chung, B., Choi, S., Moon, I., Park, C., Kim, Y.-H., & Chang, S. (2016). The Glutathione Derivative, GSH Monoethyl Ester, May Effectively Whiten Skin but GSH Does Not. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 17(5), 629. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms17050629 Cited by: 48
Erler, S. (0). Targeting Melanin Production: The Safety of Tyrosinase Inhibition. Targeting Melanin Production: The Safety of Tyrosinase Inhibition - MDPI.
Cited by: 1
Lu, Y., F. Tonissen, K., & Di Trapani, G. (2021). Modulating skin colour: role of the thioredoxin and glutathione systems in regulating melanogenesis. Bioscience Reports, 41. https://doi.org/10.1042/bsr20210427 Cited by: 90
Pillaiyar, T., Manickam, M., & Namasivayam, V. (2017). Skin whitening agents: medicinal chemistry perspective of tyrosinase inhibitors. Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry, 32(1), 403-425. https://doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2016.1256882 Cited by: 1151
Wagatsuma, T., et al. (2023). Melanin biosynthesis requires zinc in addition to copper — Findings by Kyoto University overturn dogma of over 70 years and give hints at the composition of whitening cosmetics. Communications Biology. https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-04640-5 Zolghadri, S., Bahrami, A., Hassan Khan, M. T., Munoz-Munoz, J., Garcia-Molina, F., Garcia-Canovas, F., & Saboury, A. A. (2019). A comprehensive review on tyrosinase inhibitors. Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry, 34(1), 279-309. https://doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2018.1545767 Cited by: 1266
DISCLAIMER / READ BEFORE TRYING I need to make this completely clear before any of you start megadosing supplements or changing your stacks: Whatever you do with this information, and whatever results you get, is 100% on you. If you crash your copper levels, mess up your immune system with zinc, or ruin your skin barrier, blame yourself. You are responsible for your own biology.
I first stumbled onto the mechanics of tyrosinase inhibition in high school biology class when we were learning about enzyme pathways and rate-limiting catalysts. It clicked with me how much control this enzyme has over pigmentation, so I spent hours doing my own deep-dive research into medical journals and dermatological studies to compile this data.
I don’t know if anyone has talked about this on here or nah and honesty im too lazy to search
This is not medical advice. I am a guy on a forum, not your doctor.
Intro
A lot of guys on here focus purely on bone structure (bimax, lefort, infraorbitals), but completely overlook chromatic contrast. Lighter features specifically skin tone, lip color, and hair/eye undertones can drastically alter your perceived contrast, shifting you from a high-contrast look to a softer, more harmonious aesthetic depending on your current coloring and goals. Bassicly jbw niggas
If you want to lighten your features safely from a biochemical level, you need to understand tyrosinase.
What is Tyrosinase and Why Does it Matter?
Tyrosinase is the primary rate-limiting enzyme responsible for melanogenesis (the production of melanin).
When your body consumes the amino acid L-Tyrosine, tyrosinase converts it into DOPA, then DOPAquinone, which eventually splits into:
1. Eumelanin: Dark brown/black pigment.
2. Pheomelanin: Yellow/red pigment.
By systematically inhibiting the tyrosinase enzyme and reducing your intake of its precursor, you effectively downregulate the body's ability to produce dark pigment. This results in a systemic, gradual lightening of the skin, lips, and overall complexion.
Phase 1: Dietary Downregulation (The Intake) You cannot completely eliminate tyrosine from your diet because it is a vital amino acid, but you can optimize your intake to minimize melanin synthesis.
Reduce High-Tyrosine Staples: High-protein foods like soy protein isolate, turkey, egg whites, and certain cheeses (parmesan) are packed with tyrosine. Shift your protein sources toward balanced profiles and avoid over-consuming these specific triggers.
The Copper Connection: Tyrosinase is a copper-dependent enzyme. Without copper, the enzyme cannot function. If you have a diet extremely high in copper (beef liver, dark chocolate, shellfish), your tyrosinase activity is running at 100%. Zinc Supplementation: Zinc competes with copper for absorption in the gut. Supplementing with a moderate, safe dose of Zinc (e.g., 15–30 mg daily) can help lower systemic copper levels, effectively starving the tyrosinase enzyme of its primary catalyst.
Phase 2: Systemic Inhibitors (Oral Supplements) Dietary restriction alone isn't enough to make a noticeable aesthetic difference. You need to introduce oral inhibitors that actively block the enzyme's binding sites. Glutathione (The Holy Grail of Systemic Lightening): Glutathione doesn't just inhibit tyrosinase; it actively switches melanin production from eumelanin (dark) to pheomelanin (light/yellow/red).
Note: Oral Glutathione has poor bioavailability. Use Liposomal Glutathione or its precursor, N-Acetyl Cysteine (NAC) combined with Vitamin C, to raise intracellular levels. MSM (Methylsulfonylmethane): MSM increases intracellular glutathione levels and acts as a mild tyrosinase inhibitor. It's widely used in the community for clearing up skin clarity and dropping the skin tone by a few shades over a multi-month timeline. High-Dose Vitamin C: Vitamin C acts as a potent antioxidant that reduces DOPAquinone back to DOPA, halting the pigmentation process midway.
Phase 3: Targeted Topical Attack To see the fastest results in specific areas like achieving pinker/lighter lips or brighter, more even facial skin you need to apply topical inhibitors directly to the target tissue.
| Ingredient | Mechanism of Action | Effectiveness |
| Alpha Arbutin (2%) | A clean, stable derivative of hydroquinone. Safely binds to tyrosinase to block melanin synthesis without the toxicity risks. | High (Safe for long-term use) |
| Kojic Acid | A fungal derivative that chelates (binds) the copper atoms inside the tyrosinase enzyme, rendering it useless. | High (Can be drying) |
| Azelaic Acid (15-20%) | Selectively targets and inhibits hyperactive melanocytes. Great for overall skin brightness and texture maxing. | Medium-High |
| Licorice Root Extract | Contains glabridin, which inhibits tyrosinase activity by up to 50% without damaging skin cells. | Medium (Great for stacking) |
The Stack: How to Protocol This If you want real results, you have to stack these methods synergistically.
Morning: Apply Alpha Arbutin or Azelaic Acid to target areas + wear SPF 50 (UV radiation instantly triggers tyrosinase, destroying all your progress).
Evening: Take 1000mg NAC + 1000mg Vitamin C + 15mg Zinc.
Diet Keep copper intake in check; don't megadose foods that trigger high melanin synthesis.
Summary / TL;DR (for "dnr"ers)
Lowering your features' darkness isn't just about avoiding the sun. By dropping your copper levels (which activates tyrosinase), supplementing with NAC/Glutathione to force a pheomelanin shift, and applying copper-chelating topicals like Kojic Acid or Arbutin, you can systematically lower your melanin baseline.
Always do your own bloodwork before messing with heavy zinc/copper ratios. Let me know if you guys want a breakdown on the exact timelines for lip/skin shedding cycles.
Chen, J. (0). Zinc-copper bimetallic organic framework nanosheets for synergistic treatment of vitiligo by inhibiting oxidative stress and promoting melanin production. Zinc-copper bimetallic organic framework nanosheets for synergistic treatment of vitiligo by inhibiting oxidative stress and promoting melanin production - PMC.
Chung, B., Choi, S., Moon, I., Park, C., Kim, Y.-H., & Chang, S. (2016). The Glutathione Derivative, GSH Monoethyl Ester, May Effectively Whiten Skin but GSH Does Not. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 17(5), 629. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms17050629 Cited by: 48
Erler, S. (0). Targeting Melanin Production: The Safety of Tyrosinase Inhibition. Targeting Melanin Production: The Safety of Tyrosinase Inhibition - MDPI.
Cited by: 1
Lu, Y., F. Tonissen, K., & Di Trapani, G. (2021). Modulating skin colour: role of the thioredoxin and glutathione systems in regulating melanogenesis. Bioscience Reports, 41. https://doi.org/10.1042/bsr20210427 Cited by: 90
Pillaiyar, T., Manickam, M., & Namasivayam, V. (2017). Skin whitening agents: medicinal chemistry perspective of tyrosinase inhibitors. Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry, 32(1), 403-425. https://doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2016.1256882 Cited by: 1151
Wagatsuma, T., et al. (2023). Melanin biosynthesis requires zinc in addition to copper — Findings by Kyoto University overturn dogma of over 70 years and give hints at the composition of whitening cosmetics. Communications Biology. https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-04640-5 Zolghadri, S., Bahrami, A., Hassan Khan, M. T., Munoz-Munoz, J., Garcia-Molina, F., Garcia-Canovas, F., & Saboury, A. A. (2019). A comprehensive review on tyrosinase inhibitors. Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry, 34(1), 279-309. https://doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2018.1545767 Cited by: 1266
DISCLAIMER / READ BEFORE TRYING I need to make this completely clear before any of you start megadosing supplements or changing your stacks: Whatever you do with this information, and whatever results you get, is 100% on you. If you crash your copper levels, mess up your immune system with zinc, or ruin your skin barrier, blame yourself. You are responsible for your own biology.
I first stumbled onto the mechanics of tyrosinase inhibition in high school biology class when we were learning about enzyme pathways and rate-limiting catalysts. It clicked with me how much control this enzyme has over pigmentation, so I spent hours doing my own deep-dive research into medical journals and dermatological studies to compile this data.
I don’t know if anyone has talked about this on here or nah and honesty im too lazy to search
This is not medical advice. I am a guy on a forum, not your doctor.
Intro
A lot of guys on here focus purely on bone structure (bimax, lefort, infraorbitals), but completely overlook chromatic contrast. Lighter features specifically skin tone, lip color, and hair/eye undertones can drastically alter your perceived contrast, shifting you from a high-contrast look to a softer, more harmonious aesthetic depending on your current coloring and goals. Bassicly jbw niggas
If you want to lighten your features safely from a biochemical level, you need to understand tyrosinase.
What is Tyrosinase and Why Does it Matter?
Tyrosinase is the primary rate-limiting enzyme responsible for melanogenesis (the production of melanin).
When your body consumes the amino acid L-Tyrosine, tyrosinase converts it into DOPA, then DOPAquinone, which eventually splits into:
1. Eumelanin: Dark brown/black pigment.
2. Pheomelanin: Yellow/red pigment.
By systematically inhibiting the tyrosinase enzyme and reducing your intake of its precursor, you effectively downregulate the body's ability to produce dark pigment. This results in a systemic, gradual lightening of the skin, lips, and overall complexion.
Phase 1: Dietary Downregulation (The Intake) You cannot completely eliminate tyrosine from your diet because it is a vital amino acid, but you can optimize your intake to minimize melanin synthesis.
Reduce High-Tyrosine Staples: High-protein foods like soy protein isolate, turkey, egg whites, and certain cheeses (parmesan) are packed with tyrosine. Shift your protein sources toward balanced profiles and avoid over-consuming these specific triggers.
The Copper Connection: Tyrosinase is a copper-dependent enzyme. Without copper, the enzyme cannot function. If you have a diet extremely high in copper (beef liver, dark chocolate, shellfish), your tyrosinase activity is running at 100%. Zinc Supplementation: Zinc competes with copper for absorption in the gut. Supplementing with a moderate, safe dose of Zinc (e.g., 15–30 mg daily) can help lower systemic copper levels, effectively starving the tyrosinase enzyme of its primary catalyst.
Phase 2: Systemic Inhibitors (Oral Supplements) Dietary restriction alone isn't enough to make a noticeable aesthetic difference. You need to introduce oral inhibitors that actively block the enzyme's binding sites. Glutathione (The Holy Grail of Systemic Lightening): Glutathione doesn't just inhibit tyrosinase; it actively switches melanin production from eumelanin (dark) to pheomelanin (light/yellow/red).
Note: Oral Glutathione has poor bioavailability. Use Liposomal Glutathione or its precursor, N-Acetyl Cysteine (NAC) combined with Vitamin C, to raise intracellular levels. MSM (Methylsulfonylmethane): MSM increases intracellular glutathione levels and acts as a mild tyrosinase inhibitor. It's widely used in the community for clearing up skin clarity and dropping the skin tone by a few shades over a multi-month timeline. High-Dose Vitamin C: Vitamin C acts as a potent antioxidant that reduces DOPAquinone back to DOPA, halting the pigmentation process midway.
Phase 3: Targeted Topical Attack To see the fastest results in specific areas like achieving pinker/lighter lips or brighter, more even facial skin you need to apply topical inhibitors directly to the target tissue.
| Ingredient | Mechanism of Action | Effectiveness |
| Alpha Arbutin (2%) | A clean, stable derivative of hydroquinone. Safely binds to tyrosinase to block melanin synthesis without the toxicity risks. | High (Safe for long-term use) |
| Kojic Acid | A fungal derivative that chelates (binds) the copper atoms inside the tyrosinase enzyme, rendering it useless. | High (Can be drying) |
| Azelaic Acid (15-20%) | Selectively targets and inhibits hyperactive melanocytes. Great for overall skin brightness and texture maxing. | Medium-High |
| Licorice Root Extract | Contains glabridin, which inhibits tyrosinase activity by up to 50% without damaging skin cells. | Medium (Great for stacking) |
The Stack: How to Protocol This If you want real results, you have to stack these methods synergistically.
Morning: Apply Alpha Arbutin or Azelaic Acid to target areas + wear SPF 50 (UV radiation instantly triggers tyrosinase, destroying all your progress).
Evening: Take 1000mg NAC + 1000mg Vitamin C + 15mg Zinc.
Diet Keep copper intake in check; don't megadose foods that trigger high melanin synthesis.
Summary / TL;DR (for "dnr"ers)
Lowering your features' darkness isn't just about avoiding the sun. By dropping your copper levels (which activates tyrosinase), supplementing with NAC/Glutathione to force a pheomelanin shift, and applying copper-chelating topicals like Kojic Acid or Arbutin, you can systematically lower your melanin baseline.
Always do your own bloodwork before messing with heavy zinc/copper ratios. Let me know if you guys want a breakdown on the exact timelines for lip/skin shedding cycles.
Chen, J. (0). Zinc-copper bimetallic organic framework nanosheets for synergistic treatment of vitiligo by inhibiting oxidative stress and promoting melanin production. Zinc-copper bimetallic organic framework nanosheets for synergistic treatment of vitiligo by inhibiting oxidative stress and promoting melanin production - PMC.
Chung, B., Choi, S., Moon, I., Park, C., Kim, Y.-H., & Chang, S. (2016). The Glutathione Derivative, GSH Monoethyl Ester, May Effectively Whiten Skin but GSH Does Not. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 17(5), 629. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms17050629 Cited by: 48
Erler, S. (0). Targeting Melanin Production: The Safety of Tyrosinase Inhibition. Targeting Melanin Production: The Safety of Tyrosinase Inhibition - MDPI.
Cited by: 1
Lu, Y., F. Tonissen, K., & Di Trapani, G. (2021). Modulating skin colour: role of the thioredoxin and glutathione systems in regulating melanogenesis. Bioscience Reports, 41. https://doi.org/10.1042/bsr20210427 Cited by: 90
Pillaiyar, T., Manickam, M., & Namasivayam, V. (2017). Skin whitening agents: medicinal chemistry perspective of tyrosinase inhibitors. Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry, 32(1), 403-425. https://doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2016.1256882 Cited by: 1151
Wagatsuma, T., et al. (2023). Melanin biosynthesis requires zinc in addition to copper — Findings by Kyoto University overturn dogma of over 70 years and give hints at the composition of whitening cosmetics. Communications Biology. https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-04640-5 Zolghadri, S., Bahrami, A., Hassan Khan, M. T., Munoz-Munoz, J., Garcia-Molina, F., Garcia-Canovas, F., & Saboury, A. A. (2019). A comprehensive review on tyrosinase inhibitors. Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry, 34(1), 279-309. https://doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2018.1545767 Cited by: 1266
DISCLAIMER / READ BEFORE TRYING I need to make this completely clear before any of you start megadosing supplements or changing your stacks: Whatever you do with this information, and whatever results you get, is 100% on you. If you crash your copper levels, mess up your immune system with zinc, or ruin your skin barrier, blame yourself. You are responsible for your own biology.
I first stumbled onto the mechanics of tyrosinase inhibition in high school biology class when we were learning about enzyme pathways and rate-limiting catalysts. It clicked with me how much control this enzyme has over pigmentation, so I spent hours doing my own deep-dive research into medical journals and dermatological studies to compile this data.
I don’t know if anyone has talked about this on here or nah and honesty im too lazy to search
This is not medical advice. I am a guy on a forum, not your doctor.
Intro
A lot of guys on here focus purely on bone structure (bimax, lefort, infraorbitals), but completely overlook chromatic contrast. Lighter features specifically skin tone, lip color, and hair/eye undertones can drastically alter your perceived contrast, shifting you from a high-contrast look to a softer, more harmonious aesthetic depending on your current coloring and goals. Bassicly jbw niggas
If you want to lighten your features safely from a biochemical level, you need to understand tyrosinase.
What is Tyrosinase and Why Does it Matter?
Tyrosinase is the primary rate-limiting enzyme responsible for melanogenesis (the production of melanin).
When your body consumes the amino acid L-Tyrosine, tyrosinase converts it into DOPA, then DOPAquinone, which eventually splits into:
1. Eumelanin: Dark brown/black pigment.
2. Pheomelanin: Yellow/red pigment.
By systematically inhibiting the tyrosinase enzyme and reducing your intake of its precursor, you effectively downregulate the body's ability to produce dark pigment. This results in a systemic, gradual lightening of the skin, lips, and overall complexion.
Phase 1: Dietary Downregulation (The Intake) You cannot completely eliminate tyrosine from your diet because it is a vital amino acid, but you can optimize your intake to minimize melanin synthesis.
Reduce High-Tyrosine Staples: High-protein foods like soy protein isolate, turkey, egg whites, and certain cheeses (parmesan) are packed with tyrosine. Shift your protein sources toward balanced profiles and avoid over-consuming these specific triggers.
The Copper Connection: Tyrosinase is a copper-dependent enzyme. Without copper, the enzyme cannot function. If you have a diet extremely high in copper (beef liver, dark chocolate, shellfish), your tyrosinase activity is running at 100%. Zinc Supplementation: Zinc competes with copper for absorption in the gut. Supplementing with a moderate, safe dose of Zinc (e.g., 15–30 mg daily) can help lower systemic copper levels, effectively starving the tyrosinase enzyme of its primary catalyst.
Phase 2: Systemic Inhibitors (Oral Supplements) Dietary restriction alone isn't enough to make a noticeable aesthetic difference. You need to introduce oral inhibitors that actively block the enzyme's binding sites. Glutathione (The Holy Grail of Systemic Lightening): Glutathione doesn't just inhibit tyrosinase; it actively switches melanin production from eumelanin (dark) to pheomelanin (light/yellow/red).
Note: Oral Glutathione has poor bioavailability. Use Liposomal Glutathione or its precursor, N-Acetyl Cysteine (NAC) combined with Vitamin C, to raise intracellular levels. MSM (Methylsulfonylmethane): MSM increases intracellular glutathione levels and acts as a mild tyrosinase inhibitor. It's widely used in the community for clearing up skin clarity and dropping the skin tone by a few shades over a multi-month timeline. High-Dose Vitamin C: Vitamin C acts as a potent antioxidant that reduces DOPAquinone back to DOPA, halting the pigmentation process midway.
Phase 3: Targeted Topical Attack To see the fastest results in specific areas like achieving pinker/lighter lips or brighter, more even facial skin you need to apply topical inhibitors directly to the target tissue.
| Ingredient | Mechanism of Action | Effectiveness |
| Alpha Arbutin (2%) | A clean, stable derivative of hydroquinone. Safely binds to tyrosinase to block melanin synthesis without the toxicity risks. | High (Safe for long-term use) |
| Kojic Acid | A fungal derivative that chelates (binds) the copper atoms inside the tyrosinase enzyme, rendering it useless. | High (Can be drying) |
| Azelaic Acid (15-20%) | Selectively targets and inhibits hyperactive melanocytes. Great for overall skin brightness and texture maxing. | Medium-High |
| Licorice Root Extract | Contains glabridin, which inhibits tyrosinase activity by up to 50% without damaging skin cells. | Medium (Great for stacking) |
The Stack: How to Protocol This If you want real results, you have to stack these methods synergistically.
Morning: Apply Alpha Arbutin or Azelaic Acid to target areas + wear SPF 50 (UV radiation instantly triggers tyrosinase, destroying all your progress).
Evening: Take 1000mg NAC + 1000mg Vitamin C + 15mg Zinc.
Diet Keep copper intake in check; don't megadose foods that trigger high melanin synthesis.
Summary / TL;DR (for "dnr"ers)
Lowering your features' darkness isn't just about avoiding the sun. By dropping your copper levels (which activates tyrosinase), supplementing with NAC/Glutathione to force a pheomelanin shift, and applying copper-chelating topicals like Kojic Acid or Arbutin, you can systematically lower your melanin baseline.
Always do your own bloodwork before messing with heavy zinc/copper ratios. Let me know if you guys want a breakdown on the exact timelines for lip/skin shedding cycles.
Chen, J. (0). Zinc-copper bimetallic organic framework nanosheets for synergistic treatment of vitiligo by inhibiting oxidative stress and promoting melanin production. Zinc-copper bimetallic organic framework nanosheets for synergistic treatment of vitiligo by inhibiting oxidative stress and promoting melanin production - PMC.
Chung, B., Choi, S., Moon, I., Park, C., Kim, Y.-H., & Chang, S. (2016). The Glutathione Derivative, GSH Monoethyl Ester, May Effectively Whiten Skin but GSH Does Not. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 17(5), 629. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms17050629 Cited by: 48
Erler, S. (0). Targeting Melanin Production: The Safety of Tyrosinase Inhibition. Targeting Melanin Production: The Safety of Tyrosinase Inhibition - MDPI.
Cited by: 1
Lu, Y., F. Tonissen, K., & Di Trapani, G. (2021). Modulating skin colour: role of the thioredoxin and glutathione systems in regulating melanogenesis. Bioscience Reports, 41. https://doi.org/10.1042/bsr20210427 Cited by: 90
Pillaiyar, T., Manickam, M., & Namasivayam, V. (2017). Skin whitening agents: medicinal chemistry perspective of tyrosinase inhibitors. Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry, 32(1), 403-425. https://doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2016.1256882 Cited by: 1151
Wagatsuma, T., et al. (2023). Melanin biosynthesis requires zinc in addition to copper — Findings by Kyoto University overturn dogma of over 70 years and give hints at the composition of whitening cosmetics. Communications Biology. https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-04640-5 Zolghadri, S., Bahrami, A., Hassan Khan, M. T., Munoz-Munoz, J., Garcia-Molina, F., Garcia-Canovas, F., & Saboury, A. A. (2019). A comprehensive review on tyrosinase inhibitors. Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry, 34(1), 279-309. https://doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2018.1545767 Cited by: 1266
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