Epidermis tyrosinase is a hysteretic enzyme.

[1]  B. Kurganov,et al.  The theoretical analysis of kinetic behaviour of kinetic behaviour of "hysteretic" allosteric enzymes. III. Dissociating and associating enzyme systems in which the rate of installation of equilibrium between the oligomeric forms in comparable to that of enzymatic reaction. , 1976, Journal of theoretical biology.

[2]  K. Neet,et al.  Cooperativity and slow transitions in the regulation of oligomeric and monomeric enzymes , 1976 .

[3]  R. Pau,et al.  The hydroxylation of tyrosine by an enzyme from third-instar larvae of the blowfly Calliphora erythrocephala. , 1975, The Biochemical journal.

[4]  S. Pomerantz,et al.  Purification and properties of tyrosinases from Vibrio tyrosinaticus. , 1974, Archives of biochemistry and biophysics.

[5]  S. Pomerantz,et al.  Purification and properties of tyrosinase isoenzymes from hamster melanoma. , 1973, The Yale journal of biology and medicine.

[6]  G. Markus,et al.  Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase of Escherichia coli. Purification and some properties. , 1972, The Journal of biological chemistry.

[7]  H. V. Marsh,et al.  Properties of an enzyme from bananas (Musa sapientum) which hydroxylates tyramine to dopamine , 1971 .

[8]  Carl Frieden Kinetic aspects of regulation of metabolic processes. The hysteretic enzyme concept. , 1970, The Journal of biological chemistry.

[9]  S. Pomerantz,et al.  3,4-dihydroxy-L-phenylalanine as the tyrosinase cofactor. Occurrence in melanoma and binding constant. , 1967, The Journal of biological chemistry.

[10]  S. Pomerantz The tyrosine hydroxylase activity of mammalian tyrosinase. , 1966, The Journal of biological chemistry.

[11]  H. S. Mason The chemistry of melanin; mechanism of the oxidation of dihydroxyphenylalanine by tyrosinase. , 1948, The Journal of biological chemistry.