Okeudo-Cogan Mary C, Murray Brent S, Ettelaie Rammile, Connell Simon D, Peckham Michelle, Hughes Ruth E, Fuller Martin J G, Radford Stewart J, Sarkar Anwesha
School of Chemical and Process Engineering, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, U.K.
Food Colloids and Bioprocessing Group, School of Food Science and Nutrition, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, U.K.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2025 May 21;17(20):30212-30224. doi: 10.1021/acsami.5c01064. Epub 2025 Apr 17.
Fungal hyphae have demonstrated their importance in developing environmentally friendly, multiscale, composite assemblies where animal-derived proteins have been predominantly used as binders. Now, an ongoing challenge is to replace those high-performance animal protein binders with ecofriendly, plant-based alternatives. While the majority of studies have focused on the binding implied by rheological observations, relatively little is known about how such animal proteins bind to hyphal surfaces at nanometric length scales, and this knowledge is required to replace animal-derived binders with plant protein alternatives. Here, we decode intermolecular interactions of plant protein-based binders such as potato protein ( to fungal ( hyphae in comparison to a classic animal protein-based binder (egg white protein, ) using a suite of theoretical and experimental approaches. Self-consistent field calculations modeling fungal hyphae as weakly hydrophobic, parallel cylinders predicted differences in the interaction potentials between the model protein layers, showing that had an attractive potential across a broad range of conditions, in contrast to that was mainly repulsive. Stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy of protein-coated fungal hyphae confirmed that delivers a uniform and complete coverage, while naturally aggregates, resulting in more patchy coverage. Experimental interaction forces were measured using colloidal probe atomic force microscopy, confirming the influence of non-Coulombic forces particularly dominating in , and attractive forces in , further differentiating their respective binding mechanisms. Collectively, this multimethodological study provides a first-hand molecular explanation of the weaker hyphal-binding properties of aggregated plant proteins at the nanoscale, consistent with the previously reported macroscale observations.
真菌菌丝已在开发环境友好型、多尺度复合组件中展现出其重要性,在这些组件中动物源蛋白一直主要用作粘合剂。目前,一个持续存在的挑战是用环保的植物基替代品取代那些高性能的动物蛋白粘合剂。虽然大多数研究都集中在流变学观察所暗示的结合上,但对于此类动物蛋白如何在纳米长度尺度上与菌丝表面结合却知之甚少,而要想用植物蛋白替代品取代动物源粘合剂就需要这方面的知识。在此,我们使用一系列理论和实验方法,解码了与经典动物蛋白基粘合剂(蛋清蛋白)相比,植物蛋白基粘合剂(如马铃薯蛋白)与真菌菌丝之间的分子间相互作用。将真菌菌丝建模为弱疏水平行圆柱体的自洽场计算预测了模型蛋白层之间相互作用势的差异,结果表明,在广泛的条件下具有吸引势,相比之下,主要是排斥势。对蛋白包被的真菌菌丝进行受激发射损耗(STED)显微镜观察证实,能提供均匀且完全的覆盖,而会自然聚集,导致覆盖更不连续。使用胶体探针原子力显微镜测量了实验相互作用力,证实了非库仑力的影响在中尤为显著,而在中有吸引力,进一步区分了它们各自的结合机制。总的来说,这项多方法研究对纳米尺度上聚集植物蛋白较弱的菌丝结合特性提供了第一手分子解释,与先前报道的宏观观察结果一致。