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The Colloidal State of Tannins Impacts the Nature of Their Interaction with Proteins: The Case of Salivary Proline-Rich Protein/Procyanidins Binding
While the definition of tannins has been historically
associated
with its propensity to bind proteins in a nonspecific way, it is now
admitted that specific interaction also occurs. The case of the astringency
perception is a good example to illustrate this phenomenon: astringency
is commonly described as a tactile sensation induced by the precipitation
of a complex composed of proline-rich proteins present in the human
saliva and tannins present in beverages such as tea or red wines.
In the present work, the interactions between a human saliva protein
segment and three different procyanidins (B1, B3, and C2) were investigated
at the atomic level by NMR and molecular dynamics. The data provided
evidence for (i) an increase in affinity compared to shortest human
saliva peptides, which is accounted for by protein “wraping
around” the tannin, (ii) a specificity in the interaction below
tannin critical micelle concentration (CMC) of ca. 10 mM, with an
affinity scale such that C2 > B1 > B3, and (iii) a nonspecific
binding
above tannin CMC that conducts irremediably to the precipitation of
the tannins/protein complex. Such physicochemical findings describe
in accurate terms saliva protein–tannin interactions and provide
support for a more subtle description by oenologists of wine astringency
perception in the mouth