Stable Nanoparticles Prepared by Heating Electrostatic Complexes of

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Stable Nanoparticles Prepared by Heating Electrostatic Complexes of Whey Protein Isolate-Dextran Conjugate and Chondroitin Sulfate Qingyuan Dai, Xiuling Zhu, Shabbar Abbas, Eric Karangwa, Xiaoming Zhang, Shuqin Xia, Biao Feng, and Chengsheng Jia J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.5b00794 • Publication Date (Web): 06 Apr 2015 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on April 14, 2015

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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.

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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

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Stable Nanoparticles Prepared by Heating Electrostatic Complexes of Whey

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Protein Isolate-Dextran Conjugate and Chondroitin Sulfate

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Qingyuan Dai,†,‡ Xiuling Zhu,‡ Shabbar Abbas,† Eric Karangwa,† Xiaoming Zhang,∗,†

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Shuqin Xia,† Biao Feng,† and Chengsheng Jia†

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Technology, Jiangnan University, Lihu Road 1800, Wuxi, Jiangsu 214122, People’s

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Republic of China

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Beijing Middle Road, Wuhu, Anhui 241000, People’s Republic of China

State Key Laboratory of Food Science and Technology, School of Food Science and

College of Biological and Chemical Engineering, Anhui Polytechnic University,



To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: +86 510 85197217; Fax: +86 510 85884496. E-mail: [email protected] (X. Zhang).

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ABSTRACT: A simple and green method was developed for preparing the stable

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biopolymer nanoparticles with pH and salt resistance. The method involved the

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macromolecular crowding Maillard process and heat-induced gelation process. The

13

conjugates of whey protein isolate (WPI) and dextran were produced by Maillard

14

reaction. The nanoparticles were fabricated by heating electrostatic complexes of

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WPI-dextran conjugate and chondroitin sulfate (ChS) above the denaturation

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temperature and near the isoelectric point of WPI. And then, the nanoparticles were

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characterized by spectrophotometry, dynamic laser scattering, zeta potential,

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transmission electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy and scanning electron

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microscopy. Results showed that the nanoparticles were stable in the pH range from

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1.0 to 8.0 and in the presence of high salt concentration of 200 mM NaCl.

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WPI-dextran conjugate, WPI and ChS were assembled into the nanoparticles with

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dextran conjugated to WPI/ChS shell and WPI/ChS core. The repulsive steric

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interactions, from both dextran covalently conjugated to WPI and ChS

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electrostatically interacted with WPI, were the major formation mechanism of the

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stable nanoparticles. As a nutrient model, lutein could be effectively encapsulated into

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the nanoparticles. Additionally, the nanoparticles exhibited a spherical shape and

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homogeneous size distribution regardless of lutein loading. The results suggested that

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the stable nanoparticles from proteins and strong polyelectrolyte polysaccharides

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would be used as a promising target delivery system for hydrophobic nutrients and

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drugs at the physiological pH and salt conditions.

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KEYWORDS: nanoparticle, whey protein isolate, dextran, conjugate, chondroitin

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sulfate, electrostatic complex

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INTRODUCTION

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Biopolymer nanoparticles have received great attention for their exceptional

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physical characteristics, including biocompatible, biodegradability, non-antigenicity,

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abundant renewable sources and extraordinary binding capacity of hydrophobic

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bioactive compounds 1-3. And it has been reported that biopolymer nanoparticles were

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able to sustain drug release for prolonged duration, enhance the stability of sensitive

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nutraceuticals and drugs, and increase the solubility and absorption of poorly soluble

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nutraceuticals and drugs

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be used as the delivery systems for nutraceuticals and drugs 1-3.

4-8

. Therefore, the biopolymer nanoparticles are potential to

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Proteins and ionic polysaccharides have been conventionally used for the formation

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of biopolymer particles by the complex coacervation 9. The electrostatic attractions

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between protein and ionic polysaccharide molecules drive the complex formation at a

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specific pH where they have opposite charges. The net charge on a protein is zero at

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the isoelectric point (pI), positive at pH values below its pI, and negative at pH values

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above its pI

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electrostatic complexes with proteins near their pIs. However, the electrostatic

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complexes formed at ambient temperature are extremely unstable when they are

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followed by adjustment of pH and/or an increase in ionic strength, e.g., the complex

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coacervates tend to dissociate or precipitate due to the alteration of electrostatic

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interaction between protein and polysaccharide molecules. Nowadays, an increasing

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number of researchers are paying attention to the formation of stable nanoparticles

10

. Therefore, the cationic and anionic polysaccharides can form the

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from proteins and polysaccharides over a wide range of environmental conditions

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(e.g., pH, ionic strength and temperature) 11-13. It has been found that the electrostatic

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repulsion is the weakest and the hydrophobic interaction is the strongest at the pI of

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protein. In addition, high temperature contributes to the hydrophobic interaction,

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formation and interchange of disulfide bond, which lead to a decrease in solubility

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and aggregation or gel formation

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could be fabricated by heating globular protein and ionic polysaccharide above the

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denaturation temperature at a pH close to the pI of protein

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protein gelation is attributed mainly to ionic bonds, hydrogen bonds, hydrophobic

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interactions and disulfide bonds 21, so that the stability of the biopolymer nanoparticle

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could be influenced by pH and salt. The nanoparticles prepared by heat-induced

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gelation could remain relatively stable at a certain pH range where the complex

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coacervates were expected to dissociate or precipitate. Nevertheless, the secondary

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aggregates of these biopolymer nanoparticles would be possible to occur at a

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particular pH range such as physiological pH conditions. Stability problem of

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biopolymer nanoparticles formed by heating protein and polysaccharide electrostatic

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complexes has not yet been completely solved.

14, 15

. For example, the biopolymer nanoparticles

16-20

. The formation of

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Whey protein isolate (WPI) is widely used as a food ingredient not only based on

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its high nutritional values but also its excellent functional properties, including

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emulsifying, foaming and gelation. WPI consists mainly of several globular proteins,

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α-lactalbumin (α-la), β-lactoglobulin (β-lg), and bovine serum albumin (BSA). The

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functional properties of WPI are mainly dominated by β-lg, the major component of

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WPI. β-lg is a suitable candidate for the preparation of drug delivery systems for

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lipophilic compounds because of its ability to bind hydrophobic constituents

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the best of our knowledge, WPI and β-lg can form biopolymer nanoparticles with or

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without ionic polysaccharide through thermal treatment. However, these biopolymer

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nanoparticles are unstable at a pH range below their pIs with and without high salt

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concentrations, leading to the secondary aggregation. The stability problem of

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WPI-based nanoparticles under acidic pH conditions and high salt concentrations is

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greatly challenging.

1, 4

. To

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Maillard reaction is a complex series of reactions between reducing carbonyl

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groups of polysaccharide and free amino groups of protein, and it has become more

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and more popular to prepare glycosylated proteins compared with chemical

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glycosylation reagents. The covalent grafting of glycosyl residues to protein can

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significantly improve the solubility, thermal stability, and emulsifying properties of

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proteins

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and no gelation. It has been widely used in the glycosylation of proteins to avoid the

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complication due to the formation of electrostatic complexes. Many studies have

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focused on the optimization process of Maillard reaction and functional properties of

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protein-polysaccharide conjugates as well as their applications

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less work has been reported on the influence of glycosyl residues introduction on the

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stability of biopolymer nanoparticles against pH and salt, which were formed by

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heating protein-polysaccharide conjugate and ionic polysaccharide electrostatic

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complexes.

22-26

. Dextran is a neutral polysaccharide with high solubility, low viscosity

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. However, much

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Chondroitin sulfate (ChS) is a mucopolysaccharide extracted from animal cartilage

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as an important food grade material. ChS contains weakly acidic carbonyl groups and

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strongly acidic sulfate groups. And thus, ChS has a higher negative charge density and

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can form ionic complexes with positively charged substance. In addition, ChS has

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been investigated as a potential carrier for drug delivery due to its numerous

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appealing properties, including safety, biocompatibility, and biodegradability 31, 32.

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Lutein, a non-provitamin A carotenoid, is widely distributed in fruits and vegetables

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and is one of the two carotenoids found in the macula and lens of the human eyes,

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which is responsible for central vision and visual acuity. In addition, lutein is a

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powerful antioxidant which plays an important role in the prevention of excessive

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ultraviolet light exposure, stroke, cardiovascular disease, and lung cancer

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Unfortunately, lutein is not synthesized in the human body. Therefore, dietary

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ingestion is the only source for supplementation of lutein. However, the

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bioavailability of lutein is limited by its inherent poor water solubility

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reports have demonstrated that nanoencapsulation is a promising approach to improve

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the bioavailability of poorly water soluble compounds 34, 35.

33

.

33

. Recent

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Objective of the present study was to prepare the stable nanoparticles against pH

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and salt by heating WPI-dextran conjugate/ChS electrostatic complexes, and to

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elucidate the stability mechanism of the biopolymer nanoparticles in a wide pH range

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and high salt concentration. The biopolymer nanoparticles were characterized by

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spectrophotometry, dynamic light scattering, zeta potential, transmission electron

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microscopy (TEM), atomic force microscopy (AFM) and scanning electron

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microscopy (SEM). As a nutrient model, lutein was used to evaluate the encapsulation

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efficacy of the biopolymer nanoparticles for hydrophobic compounds.

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MATERIALS AND METHODS

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Materials and Reagents. Whey protein isolate (WPI) was purchased from Hilmar

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Ingredients (Hilmar, California). WPI contained about 95.6% total solid, 88.7%

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protein, and 2.7% ash. Dextran with an average molecular weight of 40 kDa was

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obtained from Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co., Ltd (Shanghai, China). Chondroitin

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sulfate (ChS) was supplied by Shandong Yibao Biologics Co., Ltd (Yanzhou, China).

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ChS was comprised of 95.4% sodium ChS and 4.6% protein. Lutein (98% pure) was

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obtained from Zhejiang Medicine Co., Ltd. (Shaoxing, China). Hydrochloric acid,

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sodium hydroxide, anhydrous ethanol, phenol, sulfuric acid (98%), Coomassie

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brilliant blue G-250 and o-phthaldialdehyde (OPA) were purchased from Sinopharm

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Chemical Reagent Co., Ltd (Shanghai, China). All materials were used without

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further purification. All aqueous solutions were prepared with deionized water.

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Preparation of WPI-Dextran Conjugates. WPI-dextran conjugates were prepared

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under macromolecular crowding conditions according to the method described

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previously with minor modifications 23, 36. Briefly, the conditions of pH 6.5 and 60 °C

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were used to maximize the extent of formation of Schiff base, which is the initial

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product of the Maillard reaction. The mixtures of WPI and dextran were dissolved in

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10 mM sodium phosphate buffer solution (PBS) (pH 6.5) containing 0.02% (w/v)

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sodium azide to prevent bacterial growth. The degree of glycosylation (DG) increased

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with increasing protein concentration and mass ratio of dextran to WPI. However, the

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protein concentration above 10% (w/w) would lead to the formation of WPI gelation

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during thermal treatment

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significantly increase the DG of WPI

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WPI and dextran were 7.5, 22.5% (w/w), respectively. The solutions were carefully

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adjusted to pH 6.5 using 0.1 M HCl or 0.1 M NaOH and gently stirred for 6 h at room

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temperature to dissolve completely the mixtures. The mixed solutions were stored at

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4 °C overnight for the complete hydration. The following morning, 6 mL aliquots of

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the solutions were dispensed into 10 mL screw-top, glass vials sealed with teflon tape

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to prevent evaporation, and then incubated in a water bath at 60 °C for 24, 48 and 72

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h (denoted as WPI-dextran conjugate 1, conjugate 2, and conjugate 3, respectively).

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These reacted solutions were then removed from the water bath and immediately

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cooled in an ice-water bath. The reacted mixtures were diluted 4-fold with deionized

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water (pH 6.5, containing 0.02% NaN3) and centrifuged at 10,000g for 30 min. There

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were few white precipitates after centrifugation. The white precipitates were dissolved

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when resuspended in deionized water and heated at 100°C for 30 min. After the

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redissolved solution was assayed by Coomassie brilliant blue method and

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phenol-sulfuric acid method, the white precipitates were identified as dextran

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self-associates due to its high concentration during thermal treatment

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supernatant solutions were kept at -20 °C until use. WPI and dextran were separately

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incubated and centrifuged using the same treatment to serve as controls. All

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experiments were performed in triplicate.

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Preparation of Biopolymer Nanoparticles from Mixtures of WPI/ Polysaccharide.

15, 29, 36

, and dextran concentration above 30% could not 36

. In this work, the optimal concentrations of

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. The

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Biopolymer nanoparticles were prepared according to the method previously

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described

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ChS in deionized water and stirring for 2 h at room temperature. ChS stock solution

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was stored at 4°C overnight for complete hydration. The stability of biopolymer

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nanoparticles prepared by the mixtures of protein and polysaccharide was investigated

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by the following experiments. (i) The WPI supernatant (WPI incubated at 60 °C for

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48 h) and ChS stock solution were mixed and diluted with deionized water

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(WPI/ChS). (ii) The WPI and dextran supernatants (WPI and dextran separately

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incubated at 60 °C for 48 h) were mixed and diluted with deionized water

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(WPI/dextran). (iii) The WPI and dextran supernatants (WPI and dextran separately

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incubated at 60 °C for 48 h) and ChS stock solution were mixed and diluted with

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deionized water (WPI/dextran/ChS). WPI, dextran, and ChS concentrations were

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adjusted to fixed concentrations at 0.2, 0.55, and 0.008% (w/w), respectively (as

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discussed below). The concentrations of WPI and dextran in the supernatants were

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determined by Coomassie brilliant blue method and phenol-sulfuric acid method.

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After stirring for 2 h, the mixed solutions were adjusted to pH 5.2 (near the pI of WPI)

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with 0.1 M HCl, and then heated at 85 °C for 15 min. The mixtures were finally

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cooled for 10 min in an ice-water bath. The nanoparticle suspensions obtained by the

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above process were kept at 4 °C before analysis.

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Preparation of Biopolymer Nanoparticles from WPI-Dextran Conjugate and

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ChS. The WPI-dextran conjugate (n) supernatant and ChS stock solution (denoted as

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WPI-dextran conjugate n/ChS, n = 1, 2, 3) were mixed and adjusted to the fixed final

12, 13, 37

. Briefly, 1% (w/w) ChS stock solution was prepared by dissolving

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concentrations as described above. When the WPI-dextran conjugate 2 (WPI and

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dextran mixtures incubated at 60 °C for 48 h) supernatant was adjusted to 0.2% (w/w)

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WPI, the dextran concentration was 0.55% (w/w). To keep experimental conditions as

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consistent as possible, the concentrations of WPI and dextran and ChS were fixed. All

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other procedures were the same as described above.

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pH and Salt Stability. The stability of biopolymer nanoparticles against pH and salt

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was determined using spectrophotometry and dynamic light scattering. The

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nanoparticle suspensions were divided into two parts: one was adjusted to the desired

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pH values (1.0 to 8.0) using hydrochloric acid (2.0, 1.0, 0.1 and 0.01 M) or sodium

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hydroxide solution (0.1 and 0.01 M). The other portion was firstly added with NaCl

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stock solution (3 M NaCl) to reach a final concentration of 200 mM NaCl, and then

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adjusted to the desired pH values as described above. In this study, the final NaCl

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concentration was 200 mM slightly higher than physiological salt concentration,

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which was to verify salt stability of biopolymer nanoparticles in physiological

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concentration.

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Lutein Loading. Lutein-loaded WPI-dextran conjugate/ChS nanoparticles were

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prepared according to the ethanol injection-ultrasonic method

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solution (0.2%, w/w) was obtained by dissolving lutein in anhydrous ethanol by

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sonication treatment (SK5210HP, Shanghai Kudos Ultrasonic Instrument Co., Ltd,

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China) for 1 min. Ten milliliters of lutein ethanol solution was rapidly injected into

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100 mL of WPI-dextran conjugate/ChS nanoparticle suspension under agitation. After

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stirring for 1 h, the ethanol in the coarse suspension was removed by a rotary

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. Lutein ethanol

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evaporator under reduced pressure at 40 °C. Then the lutein-loaded suspension was

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subjected to ultrasonic treatment in an ice bath for 4 min at 400 W with a pulse mode

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of 1 s of sonication and 1 s of rest using a probe sonicator (JY98-IIIDN, Ningbo

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Scientz Biotechnology Co., Ltd, China). The final suspension was kept at 4 °C in the

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dark before analysis.

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Lutein was absorbed on the surface and entrapped in the lutein-loaded

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nanoparticles. To determine the amount and efficiency of lutein loading into the

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nanoparticles, the amount of lutein unentrapped on the surface of nanoparticles was

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measured as follows: 0.5 mL of nanoparticle suspension was added to 2.5 mL of ethyl

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acetate and violently vortexed for 1 min, then centrifuged at 1000g for 5 min. The

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resultant upper ethyl acetate layer was collected. The above treatment was repeated

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twice. The collected extracts were combined and concentrated to dry under nitrogen

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conditions and redissolved in 10 mL of ethanol for spectral analysis. Lutein

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concentration was determined using a spectrophotometer (UV-1600; Mapada

222

Instruments Co., Ltd., China) at 446 nm and calculated by the following equation: C =

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0.0322A - 0.0065 (R2 = 0.9992), where C and A were the concentration and

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absorbance of lutein in anhydrous ethanol, respectively. R2 was the correlation

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coefficient of linear regression equation. The lutein loading content (LC, % w/w) and

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encapsulation efficiency (EE, %) were respectively calculated using the following

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equations:

228

LC (% w/w) =

entrapped amount of lutein amount of WPI

× 100

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EE (%) =

total amount of lutein - unentrapped amount of lutein total amount of lutein

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× 100

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LC was defined as the content of lutein in the biopolymer nanoparticles measured by

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determining the ratio of entrapped amount of lutein to the total amount of WPI. The

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amount of lutein entrapped inside the biopolymer nanoparticles was calculated as the

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difference between the total amount of lutein added to the nanoparticle suspensions

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and that of lutein recovered by extraction. The amount of WPI in the biopolymer

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nanoparticles was obtained from the initial WPI concentration. EE was defined as the

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amount of lutein entrapped inside the biopolymer nanoparticles measured by

237

determining the ratio of entrapped amount of lutein to the total amount of lutein.

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Turbidity Measurements. Turbidity analysis of the biopolymer nanoparticle

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suspensions was carried out using an ultraviolet-visible spectrophotometer (UV-1600

240

spectrophotometer, Mapada Instruments Co., Ltd., China) at 633 nm with glass

241

cuvette (1 cm path length) 37. Deionized water was used as blank for all solutions. All

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experiments were performed in triplicate.

243

Dynamic Laser Scattering (DLS) Measurements. The apparent Z-average

244

hydrodynamic diameter (Dh) and polydispersity index (PDI) of biopolymer

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nanoparticles were measured by dynamic light scattering using a Malvern Zetasizer

246

Nano ZS analyzer (Malvern Instruments Ltd., Malvern, UK) fitted with 633 nm

247

He-Ne laser beam. Measurements were taken at 25 °C and 173° scattering angle. Dh

248

and PDI were obtained by cumulant analysis (software of Zetasizer Nano ZS,

249

Malvern Instruments Ltd., Malvern, UK). The nanoparticle samples were measured

250

directly without filtering or removing dust. 12

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Zeta Potential Measurements. The Zeta potential (ζ-potential) of nanoparticles was

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determined by laser Doppler electrophoresis at 25 °C using a Malvern Zetasizer Nano

253

ZS analyzer (Malvern Instruments Ltd., Malvern, UK). ζ-potential was calculated by

254

the Zetasizer Software (Malvern Instruments Ltd., Malvern, UK) according to the

255

Henry equation

256

was analyzed in triplicate.

257

Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) Measurements. A drop of a 1000-fold

258

dilution of the sample suspensions (approximately 7 µL) was deposited onto a

259

carbon-coated copper grid. The samples were then allowed to dry for 72 h at ambient

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temperature. TEM images of biopolymer nanoparticles were recorded with a

261

commercial TEM (JEM-2100, JEOL Ltd., Japan) operating at an accelerating voltage

262

of 200 kV.

263

Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) Measurements. The nanoparticle suspensions for

264

AFM measurement (Dimension icon, Bruker Co., USA) were diluted 400-fold with

265

deionized water. AFM samples were prepared by dropping an aliquot (1 µL) of the

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diluted suspensions on a freshly cleaved mica surface and air drying at room

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temperature for 72 h. The ScanAsyst mode was carried out using silicon tip (TESP,

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Bruker, nom. frep. 320 kHz, nom. Spring constant of 42 N/m) with a scan resolution

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of 512 × 512 pixels in the dimension of 5 µm × 5 µm. Images were generated and

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processed using NanoScopeTM software (Digital Instruments, version V614r1).

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Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) Measurements. A drop of a 1000-fold

272

dilution of the sample suspensions (approximately 7 µL) was deposited onto a

38

. The nanoparticle samples were measured directly. Each sample

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carbon-coated copper grid. The samples were allowed to dry for 72 h at ambient

274

temperature, and then coated with gold palladium using a sputter coater. The

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morphology of biopolymer nanoparticles was observed at 40000× magnification with

276

a field emission scanning electron microscope (S-4800, Hitachi Science Systems, Ltd.,

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Japan) operating at an accelerating voltage of 5 kV.

278

Statistical Analysis. All experiments were performed in triplicate. Data were

279

presented as a mean value with its standard deviation. The means were compared with

280

one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) followed by Duncan’s multiple range tests,

281

and p < 0.05 was regarded as significant. Statistical analyses were conducted using

282

SPSS 17.0 for Windows (SPSS Inc., Chicago, USA).

283

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

284

pH and Salt Stability of WPI/Polysaccharide Nanoparticles. pH and Salt Effect on

285

Turbidity of WPI/Polysaccharide Suspensions. The effect of pH on the turbidity of

286

protein/polysaccharide suspensions was shown in Figure 1A. All the suspensions had

287

a similar trend when pH changed from pH 1.0 to 8.0. WPI solution (0.2%, w/w)

288

rapidly coagulated and the white precipitates were found at the bottom of the bottle

289

during thermal treatment near its pI. Whereas dextran did not form aggregates under

290

the same experimental conditions (data not shown). Similar phenomena have

291

previously been observed by other researchers. Jones and co-authors reported that

292

solutions of β-lg alone at pH 4.0-5.5 became very turbid after heating at 83 °C for 15

293

min

294

through hydrophobic interactions and disulfide bonds, which leaded to the formation

12

. The reason maybe related to the unfolding and self-association of protein

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of irreversible particulate aggregates, in the absence of inter-protein charge repulsion

296

and above its thermal denaturation temperature. Additionally, Jones and co-authors

297

also found that when 0.5% (w/w) β-lg solution was heated at pH 5 in the absence of

298

pectin, large protein aggregates (d > 6000 nm) were formed, and remained large (d >

299

3000 nm) across the entire pH range

300

occurred near the pI of the globular protein was pH-irreversible.

20

. The results suggested that the aggregation

301

Although WPI/dextran solution did not rapidly form much white precipitates during

302

thermal treatment, the turbidity of WPI/dextran suspensions remained relatively high

303

and constant at high pH values (pH 6.0-8.0), and had a maximum turbidity at pH 5.0.

304

In addition, the turbidity of WPI/dextran suspensions gradually decreased with pH

305

values decreasing from 5.0 to 1.0. In most case for biopolymer mixtures, WPI and

306

dextran are co-soluble in very dilute solutions. Above WPI denaturation temperature

307

and near its pI, phase separation (aggregation) would take place, resulting in WPI-rich

308

and dextran-rich domains. Due to the very low turbidity resulting from dextran-rich

309

domain, the turbidity of WPI/dextran suspensions was dominated by WPI

310

self-association. It suggested that WPI was the core component of the nanoparticles.

311

The results also indicated that dextran could only partly suppress the formation of

312

large sediments during thermal treatment. It was possible that dextran could decrease

313

the frequency of encounters between protein molecules, and thereby reduce the

314

magnitude and range of protein-protein interaction during thermal treatment. However,

315

due to the lack of electrostatic repulsion and steric hindrance between dextran and

316

WPI molecules, dextran could not completely prevent WPI self-association. Similar

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results were reported by Chakrabortee and co-authors

. They demonstrated that

318

dextran behaved as a molecular shield polysaccharide and used physical interference

319

to reduce protein aggregation caused by desiccation. These studies have shown that

320

the neutral dextran could indeed partly impact the aggregation or gelation process of

321

protein during thermal treatment.

322

As shown in Figure 1A, the turbidity of WPI/ChS suspensions significantly

323

decreased at pH 5.0. It was due to the fact that ChS molecules could increase the

324

electrostatic and steric forces between particles, but these forces were not sufficient to

325

prevent the particle aggregation at pH 4.0. Similar results were reported by previous

326

studies 11, 40. Pectin stabilized the β-lg/pectin particles against aggregation around the

327

pI of β-lg, which was presumably due to an increase in the electrostatic and steric

328

repulsion between the biopolymer nanoparticles. Whereas the extensive aggregation

329

was still observed at lower pH values

330

suspensions was relatively low in the pH ranges of 1.0-3.0 and 5.0-8.0, which was

331

possible due to the lack of disulfide bond formation (pH 1.0-3.0) and the increase of

332

repulsive electrostatic interaction (pH 1.0-3.0 and pH 5.0-8.0) between biopolymer

333

nanoparticles.

11

. In addition, the turbidity of WPI/ChS

334

The maximum turbidity of WPI/ChS and WPI/dextran/ChS suspensions was

335

obtained at pH 4.0 and pH 5.0, respectively (Figure 1A). It was attributed to the fact

336

that dextran could also decrease the collision frequency between WPI and ChS

337

molecules as between WPI molecules. Therefore, dextran significantly weakened the

338

suppressing effect of anionic ChS on WPI self-association. The similar results were

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reported in previous studies, demonstrating that the incompatibility between gelatin

340

and pectin was attributed to the competitive interactions between dextran and the

341

reactive groups of gelatin

342

concentration can destabilize the polyelectrolyte complexes due to the electrostatic

343

screening effect. All suspensions in the presence of 200 mM NaCl had higher

344

turbidity over a wider pH range compared with those in the absence of salt (Figure

345

S1A and Figure 1A, respectively).

346

pH and Salt Effect on Particle Diameter of WPI/Polysaccharide Suspensions. The

347

turbidity of the biopolymer suspensions was further supported by DLS measurements

348

(Figure 1B-C and Figure S1B-C). As observed in Figure 1B, the Z-average particle

349

diameter (160-250 nm) of WPI/ChS nanoparticles remained relatively stable in the pH

350

ranges of 1.0-3.0 and 6.0-8.0. And Figure 1C showed that the biopolymer

351

nanoparticles had a small polydispersity index (PDI < 0.15) in the same pH ranges.

352

However, the particle diameter significantly (p < 0.05) increased from 550 nm at pH

353

5.0 (PDI = 0.41) to 5600 nm at pH 4.0 (PDI = 0.46) (Figure 1B and 1C). The change

354

trends of particle diameter of WPI/dextran and WPI/dextran/ChS suspensions were

355

the same as that of WPI/ChS suspensions. In the presence of salt, the large aggregates

356

in all suspensions occurred over a wider pH range compared with those in the absence

357

of salt (Figure S1B and Figure 1B, respectively).

358

pH Effect on ζ-potential of WPI and/or Polysaccharide Suspensions. ζ-potential is

359

directly related to the net charges on the surface of macromolecules and particles in

360

solutions

41

. Additionally, it is well known that the high salt

42

. Figure 1D showed that the ζ-potentials of native WPI changed from

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negative at high pH values to positive at low pH values, with a zero charge point

362

between pH 4.0 and 5.0. pH value at the zero charge point was close to the pI of

363

native WPI (4.8-5.2) reported in the literature 14. ChS was negatively charged across

364

the entire pH range of 3.0-8.0. Although dextran has no charges, its solution had a

365

relatively low negative ζ-potential, which was attributed to the increased ionic

366

strength when the solution was adjusted to various pH values by adding hydrochloric

367

acid or sodium hydroxide. These results are in agreement with previous findings,

368

which reported that the ζ-potential of dextran solution (phosphate buffer 0.01 M, pH

369

7.4) was -9.9±0.5 mV 43.

370

The absolute ζ-potential values of WPI/dextran suspensions, formed by heating at

371

pH 5.2, were smaller than those of individual WPI solutions. The results confirmed

372

that the principal component of the nanoparticles was comprised of WPI, and dextran

373

could impact the interactions between WPI molecules as discussed above. The

374

ζ-potentials of WPI/ChS suspensions were between those of the individual WPI and

375

ChS solutions below pH 6.0, suggesting that there was the electrostatic attraction

376

between cationic patches on the protein surface and anionic groups on the

377

polysaccharide backbone 44. Therefore, ChS would influence the net surface charge of

378

the outer periphery of WPI/ChS particles. It was important that the ζ-potentials could

379

provide

380

WPI/polysaccharide suspensions in different pH values. For example, the ζ-potentials

381

of WPI/ChS suspensions went from negative (-36.8 mV) to positive (+15.8 mV) as

382

pH values decreased from 8.0 to 3.0 (Figure 1D). The electrostatic repulsions between

a good explanation for the turbidity and particle diameter of

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nanoparticles decreased with decreasing the absolute ζ-potential values. Therefore, the

384

turbidity and particle diameter of WPI/ChS suspensions increased.

385

Preparation of WPI-Dextran Conjugates. Maillard reaction is a natural nontoxic

386

process, which produces conjugates from the graft reaction between reducing end

387

carbonyl groups of polysaccharide and free amino groups of protein. WPI-dextran

388

conjugates prepared by the Maillard reaction have been reported by previous studies

389

22, 23, 26, 29, 36

390

than those of the native WPI around its pI. In this study, WPI-dextran conjugates were

391

prepared with the weight ratios of WPI to dextran 1:3 under macromolecular

392

crowding conditions, which were previously reported by other researchers

393

formation of WPI-dextran conjugates was validated by o-phthalaldehyde (OPA)

394

method and Fourier transform infrared spectra (FT-IR) (Supporting Information,

395

Figure S2 and Figure S3, respectively). Meanwhile, the degree of glycosylation (DG)

396

of the WPI-dextran conjugates was determined by the OPA assay from the loss of free

397

amino groups of WPI 29, 45. The analysis revealed that DGs of WPI-dextran conjugate

398

1 (incubated for 24 h), conjugate 2 (incubated for 48 h), and conjugate 3 (incubated

399

for 72 h) were 5.2, 9.7, and 12.2%, respectively (Supporting Information, Figure S2).

400

Stability of WPI-Dextran Conjugate/ChS Nanoparticles against pH and Salt.

401

Stability of WPI-Dextran Conjugate 1/ChS Nanoparticles against pH and Salt. The

402

stability of WPI-dextran conjugate/ChS nanoparticles against pH in the absence or

403

presence of salt was shown in Figure 2 and Figure 3, respectively. Compared with

404

WPI/polysaccharide suspensions (Figure 1 and Figure S1), the turbidity and particle

. WPI-dextran conjugates exhibit higher solubility and thermal stability

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diameter of WPI-dextran conjugate or WPI-dextran conjugate/ChS suspensions

406

significantly decreased (p < 0.05) at the same pH values in the absence or presence of

407

salt, which illustrated that the dextran conjugated to WPI could significantly decrease

408

the turbidity and particle diameter of the suspension systems. The results also

409

suggested that the dextran conjugated to WPI could be extended to the periphery of

410

the inner core of the nanoparticles, and prevent their aggregation. The WPI-dextran

411

conjugate 1/ChS suspensions had a relatively constant turbidity and smaller particle

412

size diameter (about 150 nm, PDI < 0.15) at low pH range of 1.0-3.0 and high pH

413

range of 5.0-8.0 (Figure 2A-C) and in the presence of 200 mM NaCl (Figure 3A-C),

414

indicating that the nanoparticles were fairly stable to association or dissociation. But

415

the turbidity and particle diameter of WPI-dextran conjugate 1/ChS were higher at the

416

pH range of 3.0-5.0 regardless of salt. The results indicated that the steric hindrance

417

provided by the dextran conjugated to WPI with only 5.2% DG could not effectively

418

inhibit the aggregation of biopolymer nanoparticles in this pH range.

419

Stability of WPI-Dextran Conjugate 2/ChS Nanoparticles against pH and Salt. It has

420

been demonstrated that nanoparticles with 50-200 nm size acquire the best properties

421

for cellular uptake

422

particle diameter about 150 nm and PDI 0.08) could remain stable in the entire pH

423

range of 1.0-8.0 and in the absence or presence of salt (Figure 2 and Figure 3,

424

respectively), which was ideal for the encapsulation and transportation of

425

nutraceuticals and drugs. Although the WPI/dextran/ChS nanoparticles had a smaller

426

particle diameter (about 170-270 nm and PDI 0.08-0.23) at the pH ranges of 1.0-4.0

46, 47

. The WPI-dextran conjugate 2/ChS nanoparticles (Z-average

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and 6.0-8.0, the secondary aggregates of the nanoparticles occurred in the pH range of

428

4.0-6.0 and in the presence of salt, and largest aggregates (about 6400 nm and PDI

429

0.52) appeared at pH 5.0 (Figure 1B). Obviously, dextran conjugated to WPI could

430

significantly improve the stability of WPI-dextran conjugate 2/ChS nanoparticles

431

against pH and salt. However, the turbidity and particle diameter of WPI-dextran

432

conjugate 2 suspensions were fairly similar to those of WPI-dextran conjugate 1/ChS

433

suspensions (Figure 2 and Figure 3, respectively). Only the introduction of dextran,

434

from the WPI-dextran conjugate 2 with 9.7% DG, was not strong enough to stabilize

435

the nanoparticles in the pH range from 3.0 to 5.0. It suggested that the combined

436

action of the dextran conjugated to WPI with 9.7% DG and ChS could stabilize the

437

nanoparticles against pH and salt.

438

Stability of WPI-Dextran Conjugate 3/ChS Nanoparticles against pH and Salt. There

439

was no significant difference in the turbidity, particle diameter and PDI between

440

WPI-dextran conjugate 2/ChS and WPI-dextran conjugate 3/ChS suspensions over a

441

wide pH range of 1.0-8.0 and in the absence or presence of salt (Figure 2A-C and

442

Figure 3A-C, respectively). The results illustrated that both dextran covalently

443

conjugated to WPI with 9.7% DG and ChS electrostatically interacted with WPI were

444

the minimum requirement to stabilize the nanoparticles. The WPI-dextran conjugate 2

445

was more economical than WPI-dextran conjugate 3 because the latter required more

446

preparation time. Therefore, the WPI-dextran conjugate 2/ChS complexes were used

447

to further determine the characteristics of the stable nanoparticles.

448

ζ-Potentials of WPI-Dextran Conjugate 2 and WPI-Dextran Conjugate/ChS

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449

Suspensions. The ζ-potentials of biopolymer nanoparticle suspensions at different pH

450

values were shown in Figure 2D. The ζ-potential values of all WPI-dextran conjugate

451

or WPI-dextran conjugate/ChS suspensions were slightly lower than those of

452

WPI/dextran or WPI/dextran/ChS suspensions (Figure 2D and Figure 1D,

453

respectively). For example, the ζ-potentials of WPI-dextran conjugate 2, conjugate

454

1/ChS, conjugate 2/ChS, and conjugate 3/ChS suspensions at pH 8.0 were -31.5, -33.0,

455

-35.3, and -34.2 mV, respectively (Figure 2D). While the ζ-potentials of WPI/dextran

456

and WPI/dextran/ChS suspensions at pH 8.0 were -38.1 and -37.7 mV, respectively

457

(Figure 1D). The decrease of absolute ζ-potential values after protein glycosylation

458

was probably related to the highly hydratable dextran lowering the electrophoretic

459

mobility of WPI-dextran conjugate and WPI-dextran conjugate/ChS suspensions.

460

Similar results have been reported in previous studies 25, 27.

461

WPI-Dextran Conjugate 2/ChS Nanoparticle Formation Mechanism. As

462

evidenced above, the stability of the nanoparticles was closely related to the degrees

463

of glycosylation of WPI. It indicated that the steric repulsions would stabilize the

464

protein nanoparticles against aggregation, which were contributed by both dextran

465

covalently conjugated to WPI and ChS electrostatically interacted with WPI.

466

Therefore, the results suggested that the repulsive steric interactions were the major

467

mechanism for the formation of the stable nanoparticles against pH and salt. It has

468

been demonstrated that the steric hindrance of dextran conjugated to protein almost

469

completely suppressed the protein aggregation during thermal treatment

470

Combining with the present findings, it was further confirmed that the appropriate

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471

glycosylation of protein molecules was a crucial step to prepare the size-controlled

472

nanoparticles. In addition, the ζ-potentials of WPI-dextran conjugate suspensions

473

were slightly lower than those of WPI or WPI/dextran (Figure 2D and Figure 1D,

474

respectively), which indicated that dextran chains conjugated to WPI extended in the

475

shell of the nanoparticle. Previous studies have also illuminated that steric hindrance

476

was a function of polysaccharide chains on colloidal particle surface to improve the

477

heat stability of protein, which was supported by ζ-potentials of protein and

478

glycosylated protein 24, 25, 27, 30.

479

Although the formation of the nanoparticles prepared by heating protein and ionic

480

polysaccharide complexes undergo a variety of interactions and processes, the

481

electrostatic attraction and hydrophobic interaction primarily contribute to the initial

482

structure development during gelation. Proteins might only electrostatically couple

483

with a certain amount of ionic polysaccharides during thermal treatment. At the high

484

mass ratio of WPI to ChS, most of ChS chains could be partly or completely

485

entrapped and fixed in the inner core of the nanoparticles during the process of

486

denaturation and aggregation of WPI. It has been demonstrated that the β-lg/pectin

487

nanoparticles prepared by thermal treatment were primarily composed of β-lg, but

488

some pectin was still present 12. Chakrabortee and co-authors have also demonstrated

489

that there was only a few formation of complexes between proteins and molecular

490

shields against protein aggregation 39.

491

The turbidity and particle diameter of WPI-dextran conjugate 2/ChS suspensions

492

were stable in the pH range of 1.0-8.0 regardless of salt, but the secondary aggregates

23

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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

493

occurred in the WPI-dextran conjugate 2 suspensions at pH 4.0 in the absence and

494

presence of salt (Figure 2A-B and Figure 3A-B, respectively). The results confirmed

495

that not all ChS chains loosely distributed at the periphery of WPI-dextran conjugate

496

2/ChS nanoparticles after thermal treatment, but most of ChS chains were

497

incorporated into the nanoparticles to improve their stability, through the electrostatic

498

interaction between WPI-dextran conjugate or WPI and ChS molecules during

499

thermal treatment. Although there was a slight difference in the ζ-potentials between

500

WPI-dextran conjugate 2/ChS and WPI-dextran conjugate 2 suspensions in the pH

501

range of 3.0-8.0, the ζ-potentials of the former and latter were from -24.8 to -35.3 mV

502

and from -24.2 to -31.5 mV at the pH range of 6.0-8.0, respectively (Figure 2D),

503

where the electrostatic repulsion between WPI-dextran conjugate and ChS was

504

predominant. It suggested that some of ChS chains extended in the shell of the

505

nanoparticles. Therefore, the shell of the nanoparticles was comprised of both ChS

506

and dextran conjugated to WPI. Multiple interactions finally contributed to the

507

stability of the nanoparticles against pH and salt. As discussed above, ChS, WPI and

508

WPI-dextran conjugate with an appropriate degree of glycosylation could be

509

assembled into the stable nanoparticles with dextran conjugated to WPI/ChS shell and

510

WPI/ChS core in a wide range of pH values and high salt concentration.

511

Lutein Loading of WPI-Dextran Conjugate 2/ChS Nanoparticles. There were no

512

significant differences in the turbidity, particle diameter and ζ-potential between

513

lutein-unloaded and lutein-loaded nanoparticles in the absence or presence of salt

514

(Figure 2, Figure 3 and Figure 4). The results illustrated that lutein loading did not

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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

515

impair the stability of the nanoparticles. The WPI-dextran conjugate 2/ChS

516

suspension with light blue opalescence was obtained as shown in Figure 5A-1 (as

517

insert), and the lutein-loaded nanoparticle suspension was uniformly stable as shown

518

in Figure 5B-1 (as insert). Previous studies showed that the Z-average particle

519

diameter of nano-emulsions decreased with sonication treatment 48. This discrepancy

520

was attributed to the good stability of the conjugate/polysaccharide nanoparticles

521

formed by thermal treatment. On the contrary, the ultrasonic cavitation could promote

522

lutein molecules to migrate into the interior of the nanoparticles. Lutein molecules

523

were trapped in the hydrophobic regions of the nanoparticle core, by hydrophobic

524

interactions. In this study, the nanoparticles could effectively encapsulate lutein with

525

the loading content and encapsulation efficiency of 8.03, 94.07%, respectively. The

526

ζ-potentials had no significant difference between lutein-unloaded and lutein-loaded

527

nanoparticles (Figure 4B). Apparently, the neutral lutein could not influence the

528

surface charge of the nanoparticles. The Z-average particle diameter of lutein-loaded

529

nanoparticles remained almost unchanged at the entire pH range (1.0-8.0) regardless

530

of salt (Figure 4A and 4C), indicating that lutein-loaded nanoparticles had good

531

stability against pH and salt.

532

Morphology of WPI-Dextran Conjugate 2/ChS Nanoparticles. TEM. The

533

morphology of lutein-unloaded and lutein-loaded nanoparticles was characterized

534

using TEM, AFM and SEM as shown in Figure 5. TEM images of the nanoparticles

535

revealed a homogeneous size distribution and a spherical shape with smooth surface,

536

as shown in Figure 5A-2 and 5B-2. The particle diameters of lutein-unloaded and

25

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

537

lutein-loaded nanoparticles in TEM images were approximately 70 nm and 90 nm,

538

respectively, much smaller than the hydrodynamic diameter obtained from DLS

539

(about 150 nm) (Figure 5A-1 and 5B-1). It is well known that DLS determines the

540

data for the particle swollen in solution, whereas the particle diameters in TEM

541

images are obtained by spreading and drying the nanoparticles on a carbon-coated

542

copper grid

543

nanoparticles had more density in the inner core of the nanoparticles compared with

544

the lutein-unloaded nanoparticles because of the higher gray level in the former.

545

Therefore, TEM images further confirmed that the lutein molecules were located in

546

the core of the nanoparticles.

547

AFM. AFM and SEM are both powerful instruments to observe the three dimensional

548

morphology of the nanoparticles. AFM images of the nanoparticles were shown in

549

Figure 5A-3 and 5B-3. The images of all nanoparticles appeared to be fairly uniform

550

and spheroid shape, indicating that the encapsulation of lutein did not greatly change

551

the morphology of nanoparticles. Additionally, the dimensions of the lutein-loaded

552

nanoparticles were slightly bigger than those of the unloaded nanoparticles, consistent

553

with the results of TEM. The height of the nanoparticles in the AFM images was

554

much smaller than their dimension, suggesting that the nanoparticles were very soft

555

and collapsed on the mica surface during air drying 12, 18, 27.

556

SEM. SEM images showed that the nanoparticles had a fairly uniform spherical shape

557

(Figure 5A-4 and 5B-4) as observed by AFM. The diameters in SEM images

558

exhibited a narrow size distribution from 50 nm to 100 nm, which was in good

7, 19

. Meanwhile, Figure 5B-2 also showed that the lutein-loaded

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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

559

agreement with the dimensions obtained from TEM images. Our findings are

560

consistent with previous studies

561

nanoparticles observed by AFM and TEM. It has been demonstrated that large

562

amounts of water or biological fluids were imbibed into the three-dimensional

563

networks of the hydrogel nanoparticles, and drugs could be entrapped into the mesh

564

space between the hydrogel nanoparticle networks

565

illuminated that lysozyme-dextran nanogels had a low-density structure and could

566

contain a large amount of water by the swelling ratio of the nanogels estimated from

567

the ratio of average volumes of DLS to AFM

568

observed by TEM, AFM and SEM were smaller than those obtained by DLS was due

569

to the syneresis of the nanoparticles during air drying. These results also suggested

570

that there were adequate mesh spaces between the nanoparticle networks, which could

571

provide an opportunity to encapsulate other components within themselves.

572

Potential Application of WPI-Dextran Conjugate 2/ChS Nanoparticles. There has

573

been a great interest in applications of nanoparticles as biomaterials for delivering

574

hydrophobic bioactive compounds such as nutraceuticals and drugs. Moreover,

575

biopolymer nanoparticles can be easily prepared and scaled up during manufacture 1, 2.

576

Several nanoparticles have been launched in the area of cancer treatment. For

577

example, Abraxane® (paclitaxel-albumin nanoparticle) with an approximate diameter

578

of 130 nm is the first nanotechnology based chemotherapeutic approved by FDA, and

579

has shown significant benefit in treatment of metastatic breast cancer

580

commercial success of albumin-based nanoparticles has created a great interest in

34, 46

. The results confirmed the microstructure of the

49

. Li and co-authors have

27

. Therefore, the fact that the sizes

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1, 4, 5

581

other proteins

. Whey protein has been used to prepare biopolymer-based

582

nanoparticles using the bottom-up approach

583

known to be stable at low pH and highly resistant to digestion by gastric proteases.

584

β-lg has been investigated for drug delivery applications

585

nanoparticles were successfully fabricated by pH-cycling treatment and thermal

586

processing 50. Jones and co-authors discussed the effect of polysaccharide charge on

587

formation and properties of biopolymer nanoparticles, which were created by heat

588

treatment of β-lg/pectin complexes

589

prepared with the aim of developing a biocompatible carrier for the oral

590

administration of nutraceuticals 7.

5, 8

. β-lg, the major whey protein, is

1, 4

. Whey protein

12

. Chitosan/β-lg core-shell nanoparticles were

591

However, the biopolymer nanoparticles were unstable in a wide pH range

592

(especially entire physiological pH range) and high salt concentration. Glycosylation

593

of whey protein with dextran increased protein solubility and thermal stability 22. Liu

594

and co-authors illustrated that the glycosylation of whey protein with maltodextrins

595

prevented protein aggregation before and after heating, and steric hindrance was

596

concluded to be the primary mechanism responsible for transparent dispersions with

597

protein structures smaller than 12 nm after heating

598

glycosylation of protein would offer an excellent opportunity to improve the stability

599

of biopolymer nanoparticles. Therefore, the stable biopolymer nanoparticles against

600

pH and salt, having spherical shapes with smooth surface, would be used as a

601

promising delivery system for hydrophobic nutrients or drugs in physiological

602

conditions. Additionally, it has been demonstrated that complexes of proteins and

24

. The results suggested that

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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

603

strong polyelectrolytes like sulfated or phosphate polysaccharides tend to form

604

precipitates or solid-like structures, and there is a narrow range of physicochemical

605

conditions where electrostatic complexes are formed and stay in solution 9. Sulfated

606

polysaccharide like ChS may be suitable for delivering active compounds to target

607

cells 32. This method would provide an approach to prepare target nanoparticles from

608

protein and sulfated polysaccharide.

609

ASSOCIATED CONTENT

610

Supporting Information

611

Additional experimental details. This material is available free of charge via the

612

Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.

613

AUTHOR INFORMATION

614

Corresponding Author

615

Postal address: State Key Laboratory of Food Science and Technology, School of

616

Food Science and Technology, Jiangnan University, Lihu Road 1800, Wuxi, Jiangsu

617

214122, People’s Republic of China. E-mail: [email protected] (X. Zhang).

618

Tel.: +86 510 85197217. Fax: +86 510 85884496.

619

Funding

620

This research was financially supported by projects of the National 125 Program of

621

China (2011BAD23B04, 2012BAD33B05, and 2013AA102204), projects of the

622

National Natural Science Foundation of China (31471624), and open projects of the

623

Key Laboratory of Carbohydrate Chemistry Biotechnology & Ministry of Education

624

(KLCCB-KF201202)

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625

Notes

626

The authors declare no competing financial interest

627

REFERENCES

628

(1) Elzoghby, A. O.; Samy, W. M.; Elgindy, N. A. Protein-based nanocarriers as

629

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(2) Nitta, S. K.; Numata, K. Biopolymer-based nanoparticles for drug/gene delivery

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(3) Liu, Z.; Jiao, Y.; Wang, Y.; Zhou, C.; Zhang, Z. Polysaccharides-based

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(6) Paillard, A.; Passirani, C.; Saulnier, P.; Kroubi, M.; Garcion, E.; Benoit, J. P.;

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Betbeder, D. Positively-charged, porous, polysaccharide nanoparticles loaded with

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(7) Chen, L.; Subirade, M. Chitosan/β-lactoglobulin core-shell nanoparticles as

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(8) Gunasekaran, S.; Ko, S.; Xiao, L. Use of whey proteins for encapsulation and

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(10) Shaw, K. L.; Grimsley, G. R.; Yakovlev, G. I.; Makarov, A. A.; Pace, C. N. The

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effect of net charge on the solubility, activity, and stability of ribonuclease Sa. Protein

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(11) Jones,

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protein-polysaccharide nanoparticle fabrication methods: impact of biopolymer

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complexation before or after particle formation. J. Colloid Interface Sci. 2010, 344,

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(12) Jones, O. G.; Lesmes, U.; Dubin, P.; McClements, D. J. Effect of polysaccharide

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charge on formation and properties of biopolymer nanoparticles created by heat

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treatment of β-lactoglobulin–pectin complexes. Food Hydrocolloids 2010, 24,

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Figure Captions

769

Figure 1. Effect of pH on turbidity (A), hydrodynamic diameter (Dh) (B),

770

polydispersity index (PDI) (C) of WPI/polysaccharide suspensions, and effect of pH

771

on ζ-potential (D) of WPI/polysaccharide suspensions and WPI or polysaccharide

772

solutions.

773

WPI/polysaccharide mixtures at pH 5.2 and 85 °C for 15 min. WPI or polysaccharide

774

solutions were prepared by dissolving WPI or polysaccharide in deionized water.

775

Figure 2. Effect of pH on turbidity (A), hydrodynamic diameter (Dh) (B),

776

polydispersity index (PDI) (C), and ζ-potential (D) of WPI-dextran conjugate 2 (9.7%

777

degree of glycosylation) and WPI-dextran conjugate/ChS suspensions. Suspensions

778

were prepared by heating WPI-dextran conjugate 2 solutions or WPI-dextran

779

conjugate/ChS electrostatic complexes at pH 5.2 and 85 °C for 15 min. The legends

780

are as follows: Conjugate 1, WPI-dextran conjugate with 5.2% degree of

781

glycosylation; Conjugate 2, WPI-dextran conjugate with 9.7% degree of glycosylation;

782

Conjugate 3, WPI-dextran conjugate with 12.2% degree of glycosylation.

783

Figure 3. Effect of pH and 200 mM NaCl on turbidity (A), hydrodynamic diameter

784

(Dh) (B), and polydispersity index (PDI) (C) of WPI-dextran conjugate 2 (9.7%

785

degree of glycosylation) and WPI-dextran conjugate/ChS suspensions. Suspensions

786

were prepared by heating WPI-dextran conjugate 2 solutions or WPI-dextran

787

conjugate/ChS electrostatic complexes at pH 5.2 and 85 °C for 15 min. The legends

788

are as follows: Conjugate 1, WPI-dextran conjugate with 5.2% degree of

789

glycosylation; Conjugate 2, WPI-dextran conjugate with 9.7% degree of glycosylation;

WPI/polysaccharide

suspensions

were

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790

Conjugate 3, WPI-dextran conjugate with 12.2% degree of glycosylation.

791

Figure 4. Effect of pH on turbidity and hydrodynamic diameter (Dh) of

792

lutein-unloaded and lutein-loaded nanoparticle suspensions (A), effect of pH on

793

ζ-potential of lutein-unloaded and lutein-loaded nanoparticle suspensions (B), and

794

effect of pH and 200 mM NaCl on turbidity and hydrodynamic diameter (Dh) of

795

lutein-unloaded and lutein-loaded nanoparticle suspensions (C). Suspensions were

796

prepared by heating WPI-dextran conjugate 2 (9.7% DG)/ChS electrostatic complexes

797

at pH 5.2 and 85 °C for 15 min, and then lutein-unloaded and lutein-loaded

798

nanoparticle suspensions were evaporated by a rotary evaporator and subjected to

799

ultrasonic treatment.

800

Figure 5. Particle size distribution of lutein-unloaded (A-1) and lutein-loaded (B-1)

801

WPI-dextran

802

lutein-unloaded (A-2) and lutein-loaded (B-2) WPI-dextran conjugate 2 (9.7%

803

DG)/ChS nanoparticles, AFM images of lutein-unloaded (A-3) and lutein-loaded (B-3)

804

WPI-dextran conjugate 2 (9.7% DG)/ChS nanoparticles, SEM images of

805

lutein-unloaded (A-4) and lutein-loaded (B-4) WPI-dextran conjugate 2 (9.7%

806

DG)/ChS nanoparticles. The inserts are direct images of lutein-unloaded and

807

lutein-loaded WPI-dextran conjugate 2 (9.7% DG)/ChS suspensions.

conjugate

2

(9.7%

DG)/ChS

suspensions,

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TEM

images

of

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