Several important clinical conditions can result in close association between the pigment melanin and dermal collagen. Because melanin and its precursors can be chemically reactive in ground and excited states, it is important to know whether the resulting melanin-collagen interaction results in photoprotection or photoaggression. Acidic and neutral air-saturated collagen suspensions (0.033%) were irradiated with 0-2.6 x 10(4) J/m2 UVC or with 0-83 x 10(4) J/m2 solar-simulating UV radiation (SSR). Photochemical destruction of a photolabile collagen fluorophore (lambda em 360 nm) and collagen chain degradation were monitored as functions of irradiation time in the presence and absence of added (0-100 micrograms) sepia eumelanin. Melanin retarded collagen photodamage but did not qualitatively alter the fluorescence fading kinetics. Both H2O2 and O2-. can be produced by UV irradiation of eumelanin. Added H2O2 and KO2 destroyed collagen fluorescence and caused 50% chain degradation at ca 10-20-fold molar excess. Previous studies have demonstrated that eumelanins efficiently scavenge O2-.. We demonstrated that eumelanin also efficiently scavenges H2O2 as evidenced by its ability to (a) compete with scopoletin for peroxide uptake and (b) directly take up H2O2 through a dialysis bag. The latter observation suggests that peroxide scavenging could occur in vivo by melanin sequestered in melanophages. Thus, neither UV-generated O2-. nor H2O2 are likely to be present in concentrations high enough to cause measurable collagen damage. Absorption and/or scattering of excitation radiation away from the target chromophore appears to be the primary photoprotection mechanism, although scavenging of active O2 intermediates may play an important, if subtle role.