4.7 Article

Characterization of Soybean Protein Isolate-Food Polyphenol Interaction via Virtual Screening and Experimental Studies

Journal

FOODS
Volume 10, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/foods10112813

Keywords

soybean protein isolate; polyphenol; molecular docking; fluorescence

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The study established a molecular docking and virtual screening method to investigate the interaction between soybean protein isolate (SPI) and polyphenols, with results showing that the binding pattern is highly dependent on the detailed structure of polyphenols. Flavonoids were found to exhibit higher binding capacity than phenolic acids, with hydrogen bonding and hydrophobic interactions being the dominant forces in SPI-polyphenol binding. Cyanidin chloride demonstrated the highest apparent binding constant among the top-ranking polyphenols.
(1) Background: Protein-polyphenol interactions have been widely studied regarding their influence on the properties of both protein and the ligands. As an important protein material in the food industry, soybean protein isolate (SPI) experiences interesting changes through polyphenols binding. (2) Methods: In this study, a molecular docking and virtual screening method was established to evaluate the SPI-polyphenol interaction. A compound library composed of 33 commonly found food source polyphenols was used in virtual screening. The binding capacity of top-ranking polyphenols (rutin, procyanidin, cyanidin chloride, quercetin) was validated and compared by fluorescence assays. (3) Results: Four out of five top-ranking polyphenols in virtual screening were flavonoids, while phenolic acids exhibit low binding capacity. Hydrogen bonding and hydrophobic interactions were found to be dominant interactions involved in soybean protein-polyphenol binding. Cyanidin chloride exhibited the highest apparent binding constant (Ka), which was followed by quercetin, procyanidin, and rutin. Unlike others, procyanidin addition perturbed a red shift of SPI fluorescence, indicating a slight conformational change of SPI. (4) Conclusions: These results suggest that the pattern of SPI-polyphenol interaction is highly dependent on the detailed structure of polyphenols, which have important implications in uncovering the binding mechanism of SPI-polyphenol interaction.

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