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The non-covalent interaction between two polyphenols and caseinate as affected by two types of enzymatic protein crosslinking

Authors :
Xin-Huai Zhao
Na Zhang
Yan-Jie Zhang
Source :
Food chemistry. 364
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Caseinate was crosslinked by horseradish peroxidase (HRP) or microbial transglutaminase (TGase) and mixed with kaempferol and quercetin at 293–313 K (i.e. 20–40 °C), respectively. Generally, these two polyphenols dose-dependently induced fluorescent quenching in caseinate or its crosslinked products via a static mechanism, while enzymatic crosslinking endowed caseinate with higher affinity for the polyphenols with increased apparent binding constants [(9.94–168.77) × 105 versus (4.92–6.53) × 105 L/mol], unchanged binding site number and slightly shortened binding distance. To form protein–polyphenol complexes, hydrophobic force was the main driving force for the HRP-crosslinked caseinate and unreacted caseinate, while hydrogen-bonds and van der Waals force were the main driving forces for the TGase-crosslinked caseinate. Overall, quercetin was more potent than kaempferol to bind to the proteins, while TGase-mediated caseinate crosslinking induced the highest affinity to the polyphenols with the largest ΔG decrease. Thus, two types of crosslinking impacted the driving forces, apparent binding constant and thermodynamic indices of caseinate-polyphenol interaction.

Details

ISSN :
18737072
Volume :
364
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Food chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7138a6d9dd916c82c95e3be340d4ac2a