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Internal lipids of normal amylose (NMS) and two high amylose (HMS56, HMS72) maize starches were removed to investigate the effect of proanthocyanidins (PA) on starch short-term (1 d) and long-term (21 d) retrogradation. Removal of internal lipids decreased the degree of retrogradation in PA-starch complexes after 1 d and 21 d retrogradation. The relative crystallinity (RC) of PA-NMS, PA-HMS56 and PA-HMS72 without internal lipid complexes after short-term retrogradation decreased by 5.46â¯%, 6.47â¯% and 7.52â¯% when the addition of PA was 10â¯%, respectively, compared with corresponding samples without PA. Compared with PA-native starch complexes, PA-starch without internal lipids complexes had lower correlation length (ξ) and tended to form smaller polymeric assemblies suggesting that the size of aggregates growing within gels was decreased because more PA molecules impeded the reformation of ordered starch structures. Removal of internal lipids exposed hydrogen bonds and the cavities of amylose, promoting the interaction between PA and amylose and more formation of PA-amylose complexes, which in turn reduced amylose available for crystal nucleus formation delaying retrogradation. Overall, retrogradation could further slow down by PA after internal lipid removal, which provided a new perspective for enhancing the modification effect of PA on starch.
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The developmental changes in the granular surface structure and functional properties of starch during the entire grain filling period of rice (around 40 days) were investigated. The specific surface area of rice starch significantly decreased firstly then stabilized during growth due to increasing granular size. The pore volume decreased from 5.40 cm3/g at 6th day after anthesis (DAA-6) to 3.02 cm3/g (DAA-46). More starch granule-associated proteins (SGAPs) accumulated on the surface and in channels. Swelling power decreased by 46 %, whereas the flow behavior index (n) decreased by 32 % in upward curve during starch development from DAA-6 to DAA-30. Tan δ first dropped then remained steady at DAA 22-34 and lightly rebounded at the final stage, indicating that starch in the middle stage tended to have greater viscoelastic gel behavior at all sweeps. Mature starch showed lower in vitro hydrolysis rate and exhibited stronger enzymatic resistance. The results showed that granular surface features of rice starch may be an essential factor in determining rheological behavior and resistance to hydrolysis.
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Grano Comestible , Oryza , Almidón , Oryza/química , Oryza/crecimiento & desarrollo , Almidón/química , Hidrólisis , Grano Comestible/química , Grano Comestible/crecimiento & desarrollo , Reología , Propiedades de Superficie , Proteínas de Plantas/química , ViscosidadRESUMEN
Biofilms formed by Escherichia coli are composed of amyloid curli and cellulose and have been shown to be linked to pathogenicity, antibiotic resistance, and chronic infections. Guanabenz acetate (GABE), an antihypertensive drug, was identified as a potential strategic repurposing drug due to its biofilm inhibitory properties following an extensive antimicrobial screening assay of 2,202 Food and Drug Administration-approved non-antibiotic agents. The results of this study provide insights into the effectiveness of GABE as a therapeutic alternative against E. coli biofilm-associated infectious diseases. IMPORTANCE: Biofilm-associated bacterial infections are one of the major problems in medical settings. There are currently limited biofilm inhibitors available for clinical use. Guanabenz acetate, a drug used to treat high blood pressure, was found to be an effective anti-biofilm agent against Escherichia coli. Our results show that this drug can inhibit the production of cellulose and curli amyloid protein, which are the two main components of E. coli biofilms. Our findings highlight the possibility of repurposing a drug to prevent E. coli biofilm formation.
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Mild alkali treatment can potentially be developed as a greener alternative to the traditional alkali treatment of starch, but the effect of mild alkali on starch is still understudied. Normal and waxy rice starches were subjected to mild alkali combined with hydrothermal treatment to investigate their changes in physicochemical properties. After mild alkali treatment, the protein content of normal and waxy rice starches decreased from 0.76% to 0.23% and from 0.89% to 0.23%, respectively. Mild alkali treatment decreased gelatinization temperature but increased the swelling power and solubility of both starches. Mild alkali treatment also increased the gelatinization enthalpy of waxy rice starch from 20.01 J/g to 25.04 J/g. Mild alkali treatment at room temperature increased the pasting viscosities of both normal and waxy rice starches, whereas at high temperature, it decreased pasting viscosities during hydrothermal treatment. Alkali treatment significantly changed the properties of normal and waxy rice starch by the ionization of hydroxyl groups and the removal of starch granule-associated proteins. Hydrothermal conditions promoted the effect of alkali. The combination of hydrothermal and alkali treatment led to greater changes in starch properties.
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Rice was collected over the entire grain filling period (about 40 days) to explore the multi-structure evolution and gelatinization behavior changes of starch. During the early stage (DAA 6-14), the significant reduction in lamellar repeat distance (10.04 to 9.68 nm) and relative crystallinity (26.6 % to 22.7 %) was due to initial rapid accumulation of amylose (from 9.38 % to 14.05 %) and short amylopectin chains. Meanwhile, the decreased proportion of aggregation structure resulted in a decrease in the gelatinization temperature and a narrowed range of gelatinization temperature also indicated an increase in homogeneity as starch matured. Gelatinization enthalpy was mainly controlled by aggregation structure, which was negatively and positively related to the amylose content and the degree of order respectively. Peak viscosity of starch pasting increased and reached a maximum (924 cP) at DAA-21 due to larger granule size. Amylose and short amylopectin chains with degree of polymerization 6-12 showed positive and negative correlation with short-term retrogradation ability (setback value) respectively. The dynamics of different scale structure during grain filling had varying degrees of impact on gelatinization properties.
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Amilopectina , Amilosa , Oryza , Almidón , Oryza/química , Amilosa/química , Almidón/química , Amilopectina/química , Viscosidad , Temperatura , Gelatina/química , Grano Comestible/químicaRESUMEN
Normal and waxy maize starches were treated with mild alkali treatment (pH 8.5, 9.9, 11.3) in two temperature-time combinations (25 °C for 1 h and 50 °C for 18 h) to investigate the effect on starch structure and properties. Mild alkali treatment partly removed the starch granule-associated proteins and lipids of normal (from 0.31 % to 0.24 % and from 0.77 % to 0.55 %, respectively) and waxy maize starches (from 0.22 % to 0.18 % and from 0.24 % to 0.15 %, respectively). Gelatinization enthalpy of waxy maize starch increased with alkali treatment from 16.20 J·g-1 to 21.95 J·g-1, indicating that amylopectin (AP) rearrangement and AP-AP double helices formation might occur. But amylose could inhibit these effects by restricting mobility of amylopectin, and no such changes occurred for normal maize starch. Alkali treatment decreased gelatinization temperature and increased peak and final viscosity. Alkali treatment decreased trough viscosity and increased setback of normal maize starch. The hydrothermal treatment promoted the effect of alkali, attributed to the more rapid molecular motion at higher temperature. Normal and waxy starches showed different changes after alkali treatment, indicating that amylose played an important role in controlling the effect of alkali and hydrothermal treatment, primarily as an obstructer of amylopectin rearrangement in mild alkali treatment.
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Álcalis , Amilopectina , Amilosa , Almidón , Zea mays , Zea mays/química , Almidón/química , Álcalis/química , Viscosidad , Amilopectina/química , Amilosa/química , Temperatura , Concentración de Iones de HidrógenoRESUMEN
Constipation is a common gastrointestinal condition, which may occur at any age and affects countless people. The search for new treatments for constipation is ongoing as current drug treatments fail to provide fully satisfactory results. In recent years, probiotics have attracted much attention because of their demonstrated therapeutic efficacy and fewer side effects than pharmaceutical products. Many studies attempted to answer the question of how probiotics can alleviate constipation. It has been shown that different probiotic strains can alleviate constipation by different mechanisms. The mechanisms on probiotics in relieving constipation were associated with various aspects, including regulation of the gut microbiota composition, the level of short-chain fatty acids, aquaporin expression levels, neurotransmitters and hormone levels, inflammation, the intestinal environmental metabolic status, neurotrophic factor levels and the body's antioxidant levels. This paper summarizes the perception of the mechanisms on probiotics in relieving constipation and provides some suggestions on new research directions.
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Granule-associated surface lipids (GASLs) and internal lipids showed different lipid-amylose relationships, contents, and distributions, suggesting their differing biological origins and functions, among waxy, normal, and high-amylose rice starch. The GASL content mainly depended on the pore size, while internal lipids regulated starch biosynthesis, as indicated by correlations of internal lipids with the chain length distribution of amylopectin and amylose content. Of the 1346 lipids detected, 628, 562, and 408 differentially expressed lipids were observed between normal-waxy, high-amylose-waxy, and normal-high-amylose starch, respectively. After the removal of GASLs, the higher lysophospholipid content induced greater decreases in the peak and breakdown viscosity and swelling power, while the highest digestibility increase was found with the highest triacylglycerol content. Thus, different GASL compositions led to different digestibility, swelling, and pasting outcomes. This study sheds new light on the mechanism of the role of GASLs in the structure and properties of starch, as well as in potential modifications and amyloplast membrane development.
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Amilosa , Digestión , Lipidómica , Lípidos , Oryza , Almidón , Oryza/química , Oryza/metabolismo , Amilosa/metabolismo , Amilosa/análisis , Amilosa/química , Lípidos/química , Almidón/química , Almidón/metabolismo , ViscosidadRESUMEN
Studying diversity in local barley varieties can help advance novel uses for the grain. Therefore, starch was isolated from nine Ethiopian food barley varieties to determine starch structural, pasting, thermal, and digestibility characteristics, as well as their inter-relationships. The amylose content in the varieties significantly varied from 24.5 to 30.3%, with a coefficient of variation of 6.1%. The chain length distributions also varied significantly, and fa, fb1, fb2, and fb3 ranged from 26.3 to 29.0, 48.0 to 49.7, 15.0 to 15.9, and 7.5 to 9.5%, respectively. Significant variations were also exhibited in absorbance peak ratios, as well as thermal, pasting, and in vitro digestibility properties, with the latter two parameters showing the greatest diversity. Higher contents of amylose and long amylopectin fractions contributed to higher gelatinization temperatures and viscosities and lower digestibility. Structural characteristics showed strong relationships with viscosity, thermal, and in vitro digestibility properties. Cross 41/98 and Dimtu varieties are more suitable in functional food formulations and for bakery products. These results might inspire further studies to suggest target-based starch modifications and new product development.
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Three cultivars of waxy rice starch with different multi-scale structures were subjected to α-amylase hydrolysis to determine amylopectin fine structure, production of oligosaccharides, morphology, and crystallinity of the partially hydrolyzed starch granules. α-amylases hydrolyzed the amylopectin B2 chain during the initial stage of hydrolysis, suggesting that it is primarily located in the outer shell of the granules. For waxy rice starch with loose structure, α-amylases attacked the crystalline and amorphous regions simultaneously in the initial stage, while for starch granules with compact structure, the outer shell blocklet (crystalline structure) can be a hurdle for α-amylases to proceed to hydrolysis of the internal granule structure. The ability of α-amylases from porcine pancreatic α-amylases to attack the outer shell crystalline structure was lower than that of α-amylases from Bacillus amyloliquefaciens and Aspergillus oryzae. These results show that α-amylase source and rice cultivar combinations can be used to generate diverse structures in degraded waxy rice starch.
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Oryza , Almidón , Almidón/química , Amilopectina/química , alfa-Amilasas/metabolismo , Hidrólisis , Oryza/químicaRESUMEN
Normal and waxy maize starches with and without removal of starch granule surface lipids (SGSLs) were crosslinked by POCl3 (0.01 %, 0.1 % and 1 %). Crosslinked starches showed lower swelling power and solubility, but higher pasting viscosity, pseudoplasticity, thixotropy, storage modulus and loss modulus. Crosslinking increased the double helical structure but decreased the crystallinity for waxy maize starch. The phosphorus content of crosslinked waxy maize starches after SGSLs removal increased, indicating SGSLs removal promoted crosslinking. SGSLs removal increased G' and G" for crosslinked waxy maize starches. SGSLs removal increased SP and solubility and decreased pasting and rheological parameters of starches. With increased POCl3 dosage, the effect of SGSLs removal on starch properties was gradually suppressed by crosslinking. Waxy and normal maize starches showed significantly different changes with crosslinking and SGSLs removal, and the presence of amylose seemed to impede the effect of crosslinking and SGSLs removal. The removal of SGSLs could extend the application of crosslinked starch in frozen foods, drinks, and canned foods as thickener and stabilizer, due to its better hydrophilicity and viscous liquid-like rheological properties. The study will assist carbohydrate chemists and food processors in developing new food products.
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Almidón , Zea mays , Zea mays/química , Almidón/química , Amilosa/química , Amilopectina/química , Viscosidad , Ceras/químicaRESUMEN
Characterization of local varietal barley quality diversity can help boost further development of novel value-added utilization of the grain. Therefore, in this study starch was isolated from 11 Ethiopian malting barley varieties to determine starch structural, pasting, thermal and digestibility characteristics, and their inter-relationships. The varieties showed significant differences in all amylopectin chain length fractions, and the A, B1, B2 and B3 chains ranged from 25.4 to 30.1, 47.4-50.1, 14.3-16.0 and 7.8-9.0 %, respectively. The varieties also exhibited significant variation in amylose content, relative crystallinity, absorbance peak ratios, pasting and thermal properties. Moreover, on average about 83 % raw starch of the varieties was classified as slowly digestible and resistant, whereas after gelatinization this was reduced to 9 %. Molecular and crystalline structures were strongly related to pasting properties, thermal characteristics and in vitro digestibility of the starches. The study provides information on some starch quality characteristics and the inter-relationships among the parameters, and might inspire further studies to suggest possible target-based starch modifications, and future novel utilization of barley. More studies are required to investigate the association of starch quality parameters with malting quality attributes.
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Hordeum , Almidón , Almidón/química , Estructura Molecular , Amilopectina/química , Amilosa/química , ViscosidadRESUMEN
Potato noodles are a popular food due to their unique texture and taste, but native potato starch often fails to meet consumer demands for precise textural outcomes. The effect of blending small granule (waxy amaranth, non-waxy oat and quinoa) starch with potato starch on the properties of noodles was investigated to enhance quality of noodles. Morphological results demonstrated that small granule starch filled gaps between potato starch granules, some of which gelatinized incompletely. Meanwhile, XRD and FTIR analysis indicated that more ordered structures and hydrogen bonding among starch granules increased with addition of small granule starch. The addition of oat or quinoa starch increased gel elasticity, decreased viscosity of the pastes, and increased the tensile strength of noodles, while addition of 30 % and 45 % waxy amaranth starch did not increase G' value of gel or tensile strength of noodles. These results indicated that amylose molecules played an important role during retrogradation, and may intertwine and interact with each other to enhance the network structure of starch gel in potato starch blended with oat or quinoa starch. This study provides a natural way to modify potato starch for desirable textural properties of noodle product.
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Solanum tuberosum , Solanum tuberosum/química , Almidón/química , Amilosa/química , Amilopectina/química , Harina/análisisRESUMEN
Roles of temperature, moisture and starch granule-associated surface lipids (SGASL) during heat-moisture treatment (HMT) of waxy highland barley starch were elucidated. Starch without SGASL showed a higher increase in ratio (1016/993 cm-1) (0.095-0.121), lamellar peak area (88), radius of gyration (Rg1, 0.9-1.8 nm) and power-law exponents (0.19-0.42) than native starch (0.038-0.047, 46, 0.1-0.6 nm, 0.04-0.14), upon the same increase in moisture or temperature. Thus, removing SGASL promoted HMT. However, after HMT (30 % moisture, 120 °C), native starch showed lower relative crystallinity (RC, 11.67 %) and lamellar peak area (165.0), longer lamellar long period (L, 14.99 nm), and higher increase in peak gelatinization temperature (9.2-13.3 °C) than starch without SGASL (12.04 %, 399.2, 14.52 nm, 4.7-6.1 °C). This suggested that the resulting SGASL-amylopectin interaction further destroyed starch structure. Starch with and without SGASL showed similar trends in RC, lamellar peak area, L and Rg1 with increasing temperature, but different trends with increasing moisture, suggesting that removing SGASL led to more responsiveness to the effects of increasing moisture. Removing SGASL resulted in similar trends (RC and lamellar peak area) with increasing moisture and temperature, suggesting that the presence of SGASL induced different effects on moisture and temperature.
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Amilopectina , Hordeum , Temperatura , Calor , Almidón/química , LípidosRESUMEN
Lotus seed starch has high apparent amylose content (AAM). A representative definition of its granular architecture (e.g., lamellar structure) remained absent. This study defined the granular shape, crystalline and lamellar structures, and digestibility of twenty-two samples of lotus seed starch (LS) by comparing with those of potato and maize starches. LS granules had more elongated shape and longer repeat distance of lamellae than potato and maize starch granules. The enzymatic susceptibility of LS granules was more affected by AAM than granular architecture. Using these LSs as a model system, the relationships between lamellar structure of starch granules and properties of their gelatinized counterparts were investigated. In LSs, thinner amorphous lamella and thicker crystalline lamella were associated with higher swelling power and yield stress. The relationships were found to be connected via certain structural characteristics of amylopectin.
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Solanum tuberosum , Almidón , Almidón/química , Amilosa/química , Amilopectina/química , Semillas , Zea mays/químicaRESUMEN
Introduction: Bracken fern (Pteridium aquilinum) starch is a non-mainstream, litter-researched starch, thus the starch characteristics remain largely unknown. Methods: The structural and physicochemical properties of two bracken starches were systematically investigated, by use of various techniques that routinely applied in starch analysis. Results and Discussion: The starches had amylose contents of 22.6 and 24.7%, respectively. The starch granules possessed C-type polymorph with D (4,3) ranging from 18.6 to 24.5 µm. During gelatinization event, the bracken starches showed lower viscosity than typical for rice starch, and lower gelatinization temperature than typical for cereal starches. After gelatinization event, bracken starches formed much softer and sticky gel than rice and potato starch. The molecular weight and branching degree (indexed by Mw, Mn and Rz values) of bracken starches were much higher than starches of many other sources. The branch chain length distributions showed that the bracken starches were structurally similar to some rice varieties (e. g. BP033, Beihan 1#), as reflected by proportions of A, B1, B2, and B3 chains. Notable differences in some starch traits between the two bracken starches were recorded, e. g. amylose content, gel hardness, gelatinization temperature and traits of structural properties. This study provides useful information on the utilization of bracken starch in both food and non-food industries.
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Introduction: Starch is major component in the big seeds of Cycas revoluta, however the characteristics of Cycas revoluta remain unknown. Methods: In this study, the physicochemical and structural properties of two starch samples extracted from Cycad revoluta seeds were systematically investigated, using various techniques. Results: The amylose contents of the two samples were 34.3 % and 35.5%, respectively. The spherical-truncated shaped starch granules possessed A-type crystallinity, and had an average diameter less than 15 µm. Compared to most commonly consumed cereal and potato starch, Cycad revoluta starch showed distinctive characteristics. For physicochemical properties, in the process of gelatinization, the Cycad revoluta starch showed similar viscosity profile to starches of some potato varieties, but Cycad revoluta starch had higher gelatinization temperature. Upon cooling, Cycad revoluta starch formed harder gels than rice starch. For structure, the molecular weight (indexed by Mw, Mn and Rz values), branching degree and the branch chain length distribution were determined. Discussion: The results suggested that Cycad revoluta starch were different in structure from the main-stream starches. Notable differences in some starch traits between the two samples were recorded, which could be attributed to environmental factors. In general, this study provides useful information on the utilization of Cycad revoluta starch in both food and non-food industries.
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Investigation on amylopectin molecular structure is gaining importance for understanding starch property. Lotus seeds are a novel starch source with high apparent amylose content. Current understanding on the molecular structure of amylopectin in lotus seed starch is scarce. This study compared the molecular structure of a range of lotus seed amylopectins with those of maize and potato amylopectins. Internal structures of these amylopectins were compared via investigating the chain length distribution of their ß-limit dextrins. The average lengths and molar compositions of unit chains in lotus seed amylopectins and their ß-limit dextrins fell generally between those of maize and potato. The average chain lengths of lotus seed, maize, and potato amylopectins were 19.95 (on average), 19.11, and 21.19 glucosyl residues, respectively. Lotus seed amylopectins had higher weight proportion of clustered unsubstituted chains (44.94 % on average) than those of potato (43.99 %) and maize amylopectins (42.95 %). Results of correlation analysis indicated that apparent amylose content of LS was related to structural characteristics of its amylopectin due to the presence of long external chains. The results of this study are of fundamental importance for the utilization of lotus seed starch as a novel starch source.
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Amilopectina , Amilosa , Amilopectina/química , Amilosa/química , Dextrinas/química , Estructura Molecular , Almidón/química , Semillas , Zea mays/químicaRESUMEN
The distribution of surface proteins/lipids and their effect on physicochemical properties of wheat A- and B-starch were investigated. Small B-starch with higher surface protein (~1.8 %) and lipid (~0.4 %) contents did not differ significantly from specific surface area of large A-starch (~0.2 % protein and ~0.1 % lipid), indicating surface lipids/proteins for starch are characteristic of their biological origin, not directly related to granule size. The surface of A-starch granule was an integrated membrane structure (lipids covered by proteins). B-starch showed a greater decrease in peak and trough viscosity (130 and 82 cP) than A-starch (99 and 52 cP) after removing surface proteins, perhaps because the presence of residual surface lipid as a membrane protected the rigidity of A-starch granule. B-starch showed a greater increase in consistency coefficient (K) (47.01 Pa·sn) than A-starch (20.33 Pa·sn) after removing surface lipids, possibly because the greater loss of surface lipid as complex with amylose in B-starch retarded retrogradation and reduced K. These results show that different distributions and contents of surface proteins/lipids between wheat A- and B-starch granule contribute to the pasting and rheological properties.
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Proteínas de la Membrana , Triticum , Triticum/química , Almidón/química , Amilosa/química , Viscosidad , Lípidos/químicaRESUMEN
The influences of sodium chloride (NaCl)/sucrose on starch properties as affected by starch structural characteristics are little understood. In this study, the effects were observed in relation to the chain length distribution (from size exclusion chromatography) and granular packing (inferred through morphological observation and determination of swelling factor and paste transmittance) of starches. Adding NaCl/sucrose dramatically delayed the gelatinization of starch that had a high ratio of short-to-long amylopectin chains and had loose granular packing. The effects of NaCl on the viscoelasticity of gelatinizing starch were related to the flexibility of amylopectin internal structure. Effects of NaCl/sucrose on starch retrogradation varied with starch structure, co-solute concentration, and analytical method. The co-solute-induced changes in retrogradation were highly associated with amylose chain length distribution. Sucrose strengthened the weak network formed by short amylose chains, while the effect was not significant on amylose chains that were capable of forming strong networks.