Molecular Mechanisms and Applications of Polyphenol-Protein Complexes with Antioxidant Properties: A Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Interaction Mechanism and Preparation of Polyphenol–Protein Complexes
2.1. Non-Covalent Interactions
2.2. Covalent Interactions
3. Assessment of Antioxidant Properties of Polyphenol–Protein Complexes
3.1. Assessment of Free Radical Scavenging Capacity
3.2. Other Assessment of Antioxidant Properties
3.3. Assessment of Capacities against Lipid Peroxidation
3.4. Effects of Assessment Methods on Antioxidant Properties of the Complexes
4. Factors Affecting the Antioxidant Properties of Polyphenol–Protein Complexes
4.1. Combination Mode
4.2. Polyphenols and Proteins
4.3. Extrinsic Conditions
4.3.1. Temperature
4.3.2. pH
4.3.3. Other Extrinsic Factors
5. Potential Applications of the Polyphenol–Protein Complexes with Antioxidant Properties
5.1. Delivery Systems
5.2. Emulsions
5.3. Films
5.4. Gels
6. Conclusions and Perspectives
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Measurement Methods | Proteins | Polyphenols | Reaction Conditions | Influence on Antioxidant Activity of Polyphenol–Protein Complexes | Mechanism Explanations | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
DPPH method ABTS method | β-lactoglobulin | Ferulic acid | pH 9.0 at 20 °C for 24 h | The free radical scavenging ability of the complexes was significantly improved | The introduction of hydroxyl groups was the reason for the enhanced antioxidant activity of the complexes | [51] |
Zein | Chlorogenic acid, gallic acid, and caffeic acid | pH 12.0 at 25 °C under atmospheric air for 24 h | The antioxidant activity changes of control zein and zein–polyphenol complexes | The synergistic antioxidant effect of polyphenols | [42] | |
Zein | Chlorogenic acid and gallic acid | pH 6.5 cross-linked by EDC and NHS | The antioxidant activity of zein was enhanced by covalent grafting of polyphenols | The hydroxyl groups in polyphenols were still available after conjugation and terminate the radical chain reaction | [48] | |
Whey protein | Gallic acid, ferulic acid, and tannic acid | pH 9.0 at 25 °C under atmospheric air for 24 h | The phenolic compounds contributed to the increase in the antioxidative activity of the modified whey protein | The antioxidative activity of the complex is dependent on the type and concentration of phenolic compounds | [52] | |
β-lactoglobulin | Chlorogenic acid | 25 °C for 24 h | The addition of chlorogenic acid improved the free radical scavenging ability of β-lactoglobulin | The protein combined with polyphenols showed better antioxidant capacity | [30] | |
β-lactoglobulin | Cyanidin-3-O-glucoside(C3G) | pH 9.0 at 20 °C for 2 h | The free radical scavenging capacities of complexes were improved | C3G conjugation imparted excellent antioxidant properties to the complexes | [53] | |
Wheat gluten hydrolysate | Chlorogenic acid | H2O2/ascorbic acid, under atmospheric air at 25 °C for 2 h | The radical-scavenging activity of conjugates increased significantly | The structure changed, and consequently, some antioxidant amino acids exposed after forming conjugates | [46] | |
Camel whey | Quercetin | H2O2/ascorbic acid, under atmospheric air at 25 °C for 24 h | The radical scavenging activity of the conjugates produced was enhanced | The quercetin contributed OH groups after conjugation | [47] | |
Protein isolate from large yellow croaker roe | EGCG | H2O2/ascorbic acid, under atmospheric air at 25 °C for 24 h | the conjugation significantly increases the antioxidant capacity of native protein | The better antioxidant capacity of the conjugate may be a result of the addition of EGCG to increase the hydroxyl content | [54] | |
ORAC method | Mung bean globulin | Mung bean polyphenol | At 25, 70, 85 or 100 °C for 2 h | With increased addition of polyphenols, the antioxidant capacity of the system showed a trend of first increasing and then decreasing slightly | The combination of polyphenols with globulins led to the introduction of phenolic hydroxyl groups that can scavenge free radicals. When the interaction ratio was larger, the sites that could supply hydrogen and electrons to free radicals were masked | [55] |
Whey protein | Caffeic acid and EGCG | pH 3.5 or 7.0 at 25 °C for 60 min in the dark | The complexation suppressed the antioxidant capacity compared to the isolated compounds | The suppression may be due to hydrophobic interaction and H-bonding between these compounds | [56] | |
Ovalbumin | Catechin | H2O2/ascorbic acid, under atmospheric air at 25 °C for 24 h | The antioxidation ability of ovalbumin was improved via its conjugation with catechins | The conjugation introduced a large amount of phenolic hydroxyl groups | [43] | |
Whey protein | EGCG | H2O2/ascorbic acid, under atmospheric air at 25 °C for 24 h | The conjugate exhibited stronger antioxidation ability than whey protein | The presence of EGCG resulted in the increase of hydroxyl groups in whey protein | [57] | |
HRSA method | β-lactoglobulin | Caffeic acid | pH 2.5, 6.0, or 8.5, cross-linked by EDC and NHS | The activity of the complex significantly higher than the un-derivatized β-lactoglobulin | - | [49] |
β-lactoglobulin | Curcumin | pH 6.0 or 7.0 at 25 °C | In the presence of β-lactoglobulin, the antioxidant capability of complexes is remarkably higher than curcumin alone | The high activity of complexes may be contributed by both curcumin and β-lactoglobulin | [58] | |
Myofibrillar protein | Hydrophilic and hydrophobic | pH 9.0 at 25 °C | The incorporation of polyphenol enhanced the antioxidation activities | The enhanced antioxidation activities were related to the hydroxyl groups substituents in a polyphenol ring | [59] | |
FRAP method | β-casein | Chlorogenic acid | pH 7.0, at 25 or 65 °C for 30 min, 100 or 121°C for 15min | Complexes showed a synergetic effect on FRAP activity | The reducing groups originally buried in β-casein are exposed and enhance the FRAP of the complexes | [60] |
β-lactoglobulin | Chlorogenic acid | pH 7.0, at 25, 65 or 85 °C for 30 min, 100 for 15min, or 121°C for 10 min | The addition of β- lactoglobulin could enhance chlorogenic acid′s ability to resist thermal oxidation | The complexes protected the chlorogenic acid from oxidation reaction | [61] | |
β-lactoglobulin | EGCG | pH 7.0, at 25, 65 or 85 °C for 30 min, 100 for 15min, or 121°C for 10 min | The addition of β- lactoglobulin inhibits the antioxidation ability of EGCG | The formation of complex leads to the occupation of active hydroxyl group in EGCG | [62] | |
Whey protein isolation | EGCG, quercetin, apigenin, and naringenin | H2O2/ascorbic acid, under atmospheric air at 25 °C for 24 h | The complexes showed higher antioxidant activity, especially whey protein isolation-EGCG complex | A large number of phenolic hydroxyl groups were introduced into whey protein isolation | [13] | |
Lentil protein | Quercetin, rutin and ellagic acid | pH 9.0, at 25 °C under atmospheric air for 24 h | The combination of polyphenols and proteins synergistically improves their antioxidant capacity | Coupling of polyphenols to lentil protein imparted protein reduction ability | [18] | |
α-lactalbumin | Hydroxy safflower yellow A, neohesperidin dihydrochalcone and naringin dihydrochalcone | pH 7.0, at 25 °C | FRAP of the complex is significantly lower than that of its corresponding phenolic acid alone | The hydrogen bond between α-lactalbumin and chalcone is formed through hydroxyl, thus occupying hydroxyl | [11] | |
Metal-Chelating method | Porcine plasma protein hydrolysates | Tannic acid and oxidized chlorogenic acid | pH 9.0, at 25 °C under atmospheric air for 24 h | Improved metal chelating activity by trapping transition metals | The incorporation of phenolic compounds improves the antioxidant activity | [63] |
Silk sericin | Hydroquinone and pyrogallol | pH 9.0, at 25 °C under atmospheric air for 24 h | The metal chelating activity of the conjugates was improved | The hydroxyl groups of phenolic compounds can quench oxidants by providing hydrogen atoms | [64] | |
·O2− scavenging activityLDL oxidation | Gelatin | Catechin | Laccase, pH 7.0, at 20 °C for 24 h, under atmospheric air | Conferred the SOD-like antioxidant activity on gelatin, improved antioxidant activity of inhibiting oxidation of LDL | - | [65] |
CAA method | Zein and bovine serum albumin | Resveratrol and caffeic acid | H2O2/ascorbic acid, under atmospheric air at 25 °C for 24 h | Resveratrol-loaded complexes exhibited higher antioxidant ability than free resveratrol | The complex nanoparticles improved chemical stability of the delivery system | [17] |
wheat protein, chickpea protein and soy protein isolate | Blueberry polyphenol | Protein-rich substrates were added to blueberry extract, and then spray drying or freeze-drying | Improved cellular antioxidant activity | - | [66] | |
Wheat gluten hydrolysate | Chlorogenic acid | H2O2/ascorbic acid, under atmospheric air at 25 °C for 2 h | The conjugates showed significantly synergistically increased effect cellular antioxidant activity | The covalent binding enhanced the ability to promote the entry of chlorogenic acid into cells | [46] | |
Wheat gluten hydrolysate | Chlorogenic acid | Interaction during in vitro digestion | The CAA of the mixture was higher than that of chlorogenic acid or hydrolysate alone | The interaction enhanced the cell entry and the stability of chlorogenic acid | [67] | |
POV methodTBARS method | Anchovy protein hydrolysate | Catechin, gallic acid and tannic acid | pH 9.0, at 25 °C under atmospheric air for 24 h | The POV level exhibited a remarkable reduction with the addition of conjugates | The conjugates could serve as the electron or hydrogen atom donors, leading to the break of free radical chain and reacting with certain peroxide precursors to prevent the formation of peroxides | [68] |
Ovalbumin | Procyanidin | pH 7.4, at 25 °C for 1 h | The oxidation degree of ovalbumin– procyanidin emulsion was lower than that of ovalbumin emulsion | The interaction altered the sensitivity of oxidation on ovalbumin and improved the ability to scavenge free radicals | [26] | |
Soy protein isolate | EGCG | pH 9.0, at 4 °C under atmospheric air for 24 h | the Emulsions stabilized by the complexes exhibited better antioxidant capacity | EGCG delayed oil oxidation by donating a hydrogen from the hydroxyl groups and reduce the reactivity of the transition metal ions and oil by metal chelation | [69] | |
Soy protein isolate | EGCG | pH 9.0, at 4 °C under atmospheric air for 24 h | The complexes provided superior oxidation resistance compared to pure protein | The proteins adsorbed at the oil–water interface is more sensitive to oxidation than unabsorbed proteins | [70] | |
Oleosin | EGCG | pH 9.0, at 25 °C under atmospheric air for 12 h | The emulsion with the complexes shows high oxidative stability | the complexes had the ability to scavenge free radicals and chelate metal ions | [71] | |
CD method | Whey protein isolates | lotus seedpod proanthocyanin | H2O2/ascorbic acid, under atmospheric air at 25 °C for 24 h | The conjugate exhibited stronger antioxidant effects than then WPI alone | — | [72] |
Pea protein | Tannic acid | pH 7.0, at 25 °C under atmospheric air for 30 min | The lipid oxidation rate decreased with increasing tannic acid concentration in the emulsions | Tannic acid endowed the complexes with antioxidant activity and led to the formation of a thicker and denser coating around the oil droplets | [73] |
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Feng, Y.; Jin, C.; Lv, S.; Zhang, H.; Ren, F.; Wang, J. Molecular Mechanisms and Applications of Polyphenol-Protein Complexes with Antioxidant Properties: A Review. Antioxidants 2023, 12, 1577. https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox12081577
Feng Y, Jin C, Lv S, Zhang H, Ren F, Wang J. Molecular Mechanisms and Applications of Polyphenol-Protein Complexes with Antioxidant Properties: A Review. Antioxidants. 2023; 12(8):1577. https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox12081577
Chicago/Turabian StyleFeng, Yulin, Chengming Jin, Shihao Lv, Huijuan Zhang, Feiyue Ren, and Jing Wang. 2023. "Molecular Mechanisms and Applications of Polyphenol-Protein Complexes with Antioxidant Properties: A Review" Antioxidants 12, no. 8: 1577. https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox12081577
APA StyleFeng, Y., Jin, C., Lv, S., Zhang, H., Ren, F., & Wang, J. (2023). Molecular Mechanisms and Applications of Polyphenol-Protein Complexes with Antioxidant Properties: A Review. Antioxidants, 12(8), 1577. https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox12081577