Antiviral and Sustainable Coating on Textiles by Moringa oleifera Protein for Personal Protective Equipment Applications

Ji Qin, Tareq N. Bastawisy, Jiahao Chen, Danmeng Shuai, Meili Gong, Sean Johnston, Zhengyuan Pan, Francisco Romay, Qisheng Ou, Boya Xiong

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Antiviral personal protective equipment (PPE) (e.g., face masks) could extend the service life of single-use PPE and reduce the pollution of single-use plastics. However, the prevalence of nanomaterials and chemical-embedded antiviral agents can impose environmental and health risks when leached. Here, we developed a highly effective and nontoxic antiviral coating on commercial textiles using naturalMoringa oleiferaseed proteins. A simple dip coating method of polyester textiles using seed water extracts was effective because of the rapid electrostatic attraction between cationic proteins and negatively charged polyesters. The coating time and seed usage were minimized by studying the adsorption of protein onto textiles under varying times, protein-to-textile ratios, and protein concentrations. In only 15 min, the optimized protein coating achieved a ∼5.4 log10 reduction of infectivity of murine hepatitis virus, a SARS-CoV-2 surrogate. Such performance is better than or comparable to previously reported synthetic materials. The coated textile remained effective after repeated viral exposure, dry storage, and UV exposure and can be regenerated. This is the first demonstration of Moringa protein coating on textiles for broad antiviral PPE applications (respirators and gowns) controlling β-coronaviruses. Such a coating can also be applied as a novel disinfection agent for high-touch surfaces.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1306-1315
Number of pages10
JournalACS ES and T Engineering
Volume5
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 9 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 American Chemical Society.

Keywords

  • antimicrobial protein
  • antiviral textile
  • biocompatible
  • coronavirus
  • Moringa oleifera

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