“…Compared with glycosylation proteins of monosaccharides, disaccharides and oligosaccharides, polysaccharide glycosylation proteins exhibit better functional properties. Glycosylation has been a hot topic in protein modification research, as it has been found to improve the functional properties of glycosylated haemoglobin (Zhan et al ., 2021; Sun et al ., 2022a), whey protein isolate (WPI) (Wang & Ismail, 2012; Dai et al ., 2018; Guo et al ., 2018; Wang et al ., 2020a; Li et al ., 2022; Yu‐Tong et al ., 2022), rice protein (Cheng et al ., 2017, 2021), pea protein isolate (Kutzli et al ., 2020), bovine serum albumin (Kim & Shin, 2016; Nasrollahzadeh et al ., 2017), rapeseed protein isolate (Qu et al ., 2018a, 2018b), soy protein isolate (Jiang & Zhao, 2011; Yao & Zhao, 2015; Dong et al ., 2023; Feng et al ., 2023; Zhang et al ., 2023b), myosin fibre protein (Jian et al ., 2016; Liu et al ., 2017; Gao et al ., 2018, 2022; Duan et al ., 2023), casein (Bi et al ., 2016; Yousefi et al ., 2017; Zhao et al ., 2021; Kong et al ., 2023; Zhang et al ., 2023a), myosin (Yuan et al ., 2017; Ahmed et al ., 2018), and lactoferrin (Dyer et al ., 2016; Li et al ., 2020; Chen et al ., 2021; Wang et al ., 2022b, 2023) to varying degrees in terms of solubility, emulsifying ability, foaming ability, thermal stability, gelling ability, antioxidant activity, and antibacterial activity.…”