4.8 Article

Formation of β-Lactoglobulin Self-Assemblies via Liquid-Liquid Phase Separation for Applications beyond the Biological Functions

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 39, Pages 46391-46405

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c14634

Keywords

beta-lactoglobulin self-assemblies; biomolecules; autofluorescence; bioimaging; antioxidant activity; metal ion absorption

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21805229, 21901209, 82172063]
  2. Innovation Capability Support Program of Shaanxi [2020TD-042]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [3102019smxy003]

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Proteins can form assemblies with specific structures in the presence of monosaccharides, ethylene glycols, and amino acids, starting from solute-rich liquid droplets via liquid-liquid phase separation. These assemblies exhibit significantly better performances than the protein itself in terms of autofluorescence, antioxidant activity, and metal ion absorption, indicating broad applications in bioimaging, biodetection, biodiagnosis, health maintenance, and pollution treatment.
Proteins are like miracle machines, playing important roles in living organisms. They perform vital biofunctions by further combining together and/or with other biomacromolecules to form assemblies or condensates such as membraneless organelles. Therefore, studying the self-assembly of biomacromolecules is of fundamental importance. In addition to their biological activities, protein assemblies also exhibit extra properties that enable them to achieve applications beyond their original functions. Herein, this study showed that in the presence of monosaccharides, ethylene glycols, and amino acids, beta-lactoglobulin (beta-LG) can form assemblies with specific structures, which were highly reproducible. The mechanism of the assembly process was studied through multi-scale observations and theoretical analysis, and it was found that the assembling all started from the formation of solute-rich liquid droplets via liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS). These droplets then combined together to form condensates with elaborate structures, and the condensates finally evolved to form assemblies with various morphologies. Such a mechanism of the assembly is valuable for studying the assembly processes that frequently occur in living organisms. Detailed studies concerning the properties and applications of the obtained beta-LG assemblies showed that the assemblies exhibited significantly better performances than the protein itself in terms of autofluorescence, antioxidant activity, and metal ion absorption, which indicates broad applications of these assemblies in bioimaging, biodetection, biodiagnosis, health maintenance, and pollution treatment. This study revealed that biomacromolecules, especially proteins, can be assembled via LLPS, and some unexpected application potentials could be found beyond their original biological functions.

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