| Literature DB >> 35528080 |
Jun Liu1, Huimin Yong1, Xiyu Yao1, Huixia Hu1, Dawei Yun1, Lixia Xiao1.
Abstract
Proteins and phenolic compounds are two types of food ingredients with distinct functionalities. In the past decade, many attempts have been made to conjugate phenolic compounds with proteins through covalent linkages. Four types of conjugation reactions including alkaline, free radical mediated grafting, enzyme catalyzed grafting and chemical coupling methods are frequently used to synthesize phenolic-protein conjugates. The synthesized phenolic-protein conjugates can be well characterized by several different instrumental methods, such as UV spectroscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, fluorescence spectroscopy, circular dichroism, mass spectroscopy, sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and differential scanning calorimetry. Importantly, phenolic-protein conjugates exhibit improved biological properties (e.g. antioxidant, anticancer and antimicrobial activities) as compared with native proteins. Moreover, the applications of native proteins can be greatly widened by conjugation with phenolic compounds. Phenolic-protein conjugates have been developed as antioxidant emulsions for nutraceutical delivery, edible films for food packaging, stabilizers for metal nanoparticles, and hydrogels and nanoparticles for controlled drug release. In this review, recent advances in the synthesis, characterization, biological properties and potential applications of phenolic-protein conjugates were summarized. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 35528080 PMCID: PMC9074773 DOI: 10.1039/c9ra07808h
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1Schematic illustration of synthetic mechanism of EGCG–protein conjugates by alkaline method. Reproduced from ref. 21 with permission from Springer, copyright 2015.
Fig. 2Schematic illustration of synthetic mechanism of phenolic–protein conjugates by ascorbic acid/H2O2 redox initiator system. (A) The formation of Asc˙−; (B) synthesis of phenolic–protein conjugates through Asc˙−. Reproduced from ref. 36 with permission from ACS Publications, copyright 2017 and ref. 37 with permission from Elsevier, copyright 2018.
Fig. 3Schematic illustration of synthetic mechanism of (A) catechin–protein conjugates by tyrosinase catalysis. Reproduced from ref. 39 with permission from Springer, copyright 2003 and ref. 40 with permission from Springer-Link, copyright 2016; (B) chlorogenic acid (CGA)–protein conjugate through EDC and NHS coupling. Reproduced from ref. 25 with permission from Elsevier, copyright 2017.
Overview of the synthetic methods, characterization methods, biological activities and applications of phenolic–protein conjugates
| Phenolic compounds | Proteins | Synthetic methods | Characterization methods | Biological activities | Applications | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anthocyanins | Soy protein isolate | Alkaline method | FT-IR, fluorescence | Antioxidant activity |
| |
| Caffeic acid | Bovine serum albumin | Free radical mediated grafting | SDS-PAGE, CD | Antioxidant activity | Nanoparticles for delivery of resveratrol |
|
| Caffeic acid, ferulic acid | Gelatin | Alkaline method | Edible film |
| ||
| Caffeic acid, tannic acid, green tea extract | Gelatin | Alkaline method | GPC, NMR | Antioxidant activity | Edible film |
|
| Caffeic acid | β-Lactoglobulin | EDC/NHS coupling | MALDI-TOF-MS, DSC, FT-IR, fluorescence, CD | Antioxidant activity | Emulsions for fish oil delivery |
|
| Catechin, quercetin | α-Casein, BSA | Enzyme catalyzed grafting | SDS-PAGE, MALDI-TOF-MS, UV, FT-IR, DSC | Antioxidant activity |
| |
| Catechin | Egg white protein | Free radical mediated grafting | SDS-PAGE, ESI-MS | Antioxidant activity | Emulsions for β-carotene delivery |
|
| Catechin | Gelatin | Enzyme catalyzed grafting | UV | Antioxidant activity |
| |
| Catechin, gallic acid | Gelatin | Free radical mediated grafting | UV, GPC, DSC, fluorescence | Antioxidant and anticancer activities |
| |
| Catechin | Keratin | Cross-linked by formaldehyde | UV, FT-IR, 1H NMR | Nanoparticles for delivery of doxorubicin |
| |
| Catechin, EGCG | β-Lactoglobulin, α-lactalbumin | Free radical mediated grafting | SDS-PAGE, ESI-MS, fluorescence, CD, FT-IR | Antioxidant activity | Emulsions for β-carotene delivery |
|
| Catechin, EGC, EGCG | Ovalbumin | Free radical mediated grafting | SDS-PAGE, MALDI-TOF-MS, fluorescence, DSC, FT-IR, CD | Antioxidant activity | Emulsions for fish oil delivery |
|
| Catechin | Ovotransferrin | Free radical mediated grafting, alkaline method | SDS-PAGE, MS, fluorescence, LC-MS-MS | Antioxidant activity |
| |
| Catechin | Poly(ε-lysine) | Enzyme catalyzed grafting | Inhibition against disease-related enzymes |
| ||
| Catechin | Silk fibroin | Enzyme catalyzed grafting | 1H NMR, SEM, TGA | Antioxidant activity |
| |
| Catechin polymers | Egg white proteins | Free radical mediated grafting | LC-MS, SDS-PAGE, fluorescence | Antioxidant activity |
| |
| Chlorogenic acid | Bovine serum albumin | Alkaline method | CD, DSC, fluorescence |
| ||
| Chlorogenic acid | Bovine serum albumin, α-lactalbumin, lysozyme | Alkaline method, enzyme catalyzed grafting | MALDI-TOF-MS, GPC, SDS-PAGE, DSC |
| ||
| Chlorogenic acid | Gelatin | EDC/NHS coupling | 1H NMR, FT-IR | Antioxidant and antibacterial activity |
| |
| Chlorogenic acid | β-Lactoglobulin | Free radical mediated grafting | SDS-PAGE, CD, FT-IR | Antioxidant activity | Nanoparticles for delivery of EGCG |
|
| Chlorogenic acid | Myofibrillar protein | Free radical mediated grafting | Fluorescence, FT-IR, SDS-PAGE | Emulsifying and gel properties |
| |
| Chlorogenic acid | Whey protein isolate | SDS-PAGE, fluorescence, CD, FT-IR, DSC | Antioxidant activity | Emulsifying property |
| |
| Coffee-specific phenolics | Milk whey protein | Alkaline method, enzyme catalyzed grafting | CD, DSC, SDS-PAGE, MALDI-TOF-MS | Antioxidant activity | Emulsions for lutein ester delivery |
|
| Curcumin | Lactoferrin | EDC/NHS coupling | UV, SDS-PAGE, SEM | Anticancer activity |
| |
| EGCG | Collagen | Cross-linked by glutaraldehyde | Stablizer for metal nanoparticles |
| ||
| EGCG | Gelatin | Cross-linked by DMT-MM | FT-IR | Hydrogels for controlled drug release |
| |
| EGCG, chlorogenic acid, gallic acid | Lactoferrin | Free radical mediated grafting | SDS-PAGE, MS, FT-IR, CD, fluorescence, DSC | Antioxidant activity |
| |
| EGCG | Lactoferrin | Alkaline method | SDS-PAGE, CD, MALDI-TOF-MS, FT-IR, AFM, fluorescence, DSC | Emulsions for β-carotene delivery |
| |
| EGCG | α-Lactalbumin, β-lactoglobulin, lactoferrin, sodium caseinate | Alkaline method | MALDI-TOF-MS, CD, DSC | Antioxidant activity | Emulsions for β-carotene delivery |
|
| EGCG | β-Lactoglobulin | Alkaline method | SDS-PAGE, CD, fluorescence | Antioxidant activity |
| |
| EGCG | Soy protein isolate | Alkaline method | SDS-PAGE, CD, fluorescence, surface hydrophobicity | Emulsifying property |
| |
| EGCG | Whey protein isolate | Free radical mediated grafting | SDS-PAGE, CD, FT-IR, ESI-MS | Antioxidant activity | Emulsions loaded with menhaden oil |
|
| EGCG | Zein | Alkaline method | Nanoparticles for co-delivery of curcumin and resveratrol |
| ||
| EGCG, quercetagetin | Zein | Alkaline method | GPC, SDS-PAGE, UV, FT-IR, CD, fluorescence, SEM | Antioxidant activity |
| |
| Ferulic acid, hydroxytyrosol, flaxseed polyphenols | Flaxseed protein isolate | Alkaline method | SDS-PAGE, MALDI-TOF-MS, FT-IR, CD, DSC | Antioxidant activity |
| |
| Gallic acid | Ovotransferrin | Alkaline method | SDS-PAGE, MALDI-TOF-MS | Emulsions for curcumin delivery |
| |
| Genistein, daidzein, formononetin, prunetin, biochanin A | β-Lactoglobulin | Alkaline method | MS, SDS-PAGE, CD |
| ||
| Phenolics from sugarcane bagasse | BSA | Free radical mediated grafting | UV, FT-IR, XRD, SEM | Anticancer activity |
| |
| Phenolics from | Gelatin | Enzyme catalyzed grafting | FT-IR, SEM | Inhibition deleterious wound enzymes and bacterial growth | Hydrogels for stimulation wound healing process |
|
| Pyrogallic acid | Pumpkin seed protein isolate | Alkaline method | SDS-PAGE, FT-IR, fluorescence, DSC | Antioxidant activity |
| |
| Quercetin | BSA | Alkaline method | Antioxidant activity |
| ||
| Quercetin, rutin | Whey protein, β-lactoglobulin | Alkaline method | UV, MS, SDS-PAGE, CD |
| ||
| Rosmarinic acid | Whey protein isolate | Alkaline method, enzyme catalyzed grafting | RP-HPLC, hydrophobicity | Antioxidant and antibacterial activity |
| |
| Rutin | Porcine bone protein hydrolysate | Enzyme catalyzed grafting | Surface hydrophobicity, fluorescence, CD | Emulsifying property |
| |
| Tannic acid | Zein | Alkaline method | Edible film |
|
Fig. 4Schematic illustration of (A) preparation protocols for primary and secondary emulsions based on phenolic–lactoferrin conjugate and polysaccharide. Reproduced from ref. 54 with permission from Elsevier, copyright 2016; (B) anchoring Pd(ii) onto EGCG–collagen fibers with subsequent formation of Pd(0) nanoparticles. Reproduced from ref. 44 with permission from Elsevier, copyright 2009.
Fig. 5Schematic illustration of (A) a simple strategy to fabricate catechin-keratin conjugate based nanoparticles; (B) molecular interactions of nanosphere assembly; and (C) administration of colloidally stable and glutathione (GSH)/enzyme dual stimuli-responsive nanoparticles with enhanced cancer therapy effects. Reproduced from ref. 64 with permission from Royal Society of Chemistry, copyright 2018.