DEVELOPMENT OF PECTINS IN SUNFLOWER STALKS AND HEADS
- 1 July 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Plant Science
- Vol. 58 (3) , 863-868
- https://doi.org/10.4141/cjps78-125
Abstract
The development of water- and oxalate-soluble pectins in the maturing stalks and heads of four sunflower cultivars was investigated. Largest changes in the distribution and characteristics of pectins occurred after physiological maturity and a killing frost. In the interval from flowering to the normal harvest date, oxalate-soluble head pectins increased from an average of 5.5% to about 20.0% of the dry, threshed head weight. Pectins extracted into water and oxalate solutions from stalks and heads in this interval contained up to 85% galacturonic acid and 2.7–10.9% methoxyl content. Stalk pectins and water-soluble head pectins produced extremely weak gels at every stage of development. Gel powers of oxalate-soluble head pectins from early cultivars increased with maturity and exceeded that of a commercial low methoxyl pectin at harvest. However, gel power remained low for oxalate-soluble head pectins from late cultivars at all stages.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Extraction of Pectins From Sunflower HeadsCanadian Institute of Food Science and Technology Journal, 1976
- Polymetaphosphate and oxalate extraction of sunflower pectinsJournal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 1976
- Ester Content and Jelly pH Influences on the Grade of PectinsJournal of Food Science, 1968
- Properties of Pectin Fractions Separated on Diethylaminoethyl‐cellulose ColumnsJournal of Food Science, 1967
- FRACTIONATION OF PECTINS FROM SUNFLOWERS, SUGAR BEETS, APPLES, AND CITRUS FRUITSCanadian Journal of Chemistry, 1965
- CARBOHYDRATES OF SUNFLOWER HEADSCanadian Journal of Chemistry, 1955