Effects of Amylopectin Branch Chain Length and Amylose Content on the Gelatinization and Pasting Properties of Starch
- 15 September 1999
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Cereal Chemistry Journal
- Vol. 76 (5) , 629-637
- https://doi.org/10.1094/cchem.1999.76.5.629
Abstract
Structures and properties of starches isolated from different botanical sources were investigated. Apparent and absolute amylose contents of starches were determined by measuring the iodine affinity of defatted whole starch and of fractionated and purified amylopectin. Branch chain‐length distributions of amylopectins were analyzed quantitatively using a high‐performance anion‐exchange chromatography system equipped with a postcolumn enzyme reactor and a pulsed amperometric detector. Thermal and pasting properties were measured using differential scanning calorimetry and a rapid viscoanalyzer, respectively. Absolute amylose contents of most of the starches studied were lower than their apparent amylose contents. This difference correlated with the number of very long branch chains of amylopectin. Studies of amylopectin structures showed that each starch had a distinct branch chain‐length distribution profile. Average degrees of polymerization (dp) of amylopectin branch chain length ranged from 18.8 for waxy rice to 30.7 for high‐amylose maize VII. Compared with X‐ray A‐type starches, B‐type starches had longer chains. A shoulder of dp 18–21 (chain length of 6.3–7.4 nm) was found in many starches; the chain length of 6.3–7.4 nm was in the proximity of the length of the amylopectin crystalline region. Starches with short average amylopectin branch chain lengths (e.g., waxy rice and sweet rice starch), with large proportions of short branch chains (dp 11–16) relative to the shoulder of dp 18–21 (e.g., wheat and barley starch), and with high starch phosphate monoester content (e.g., potato starch) displayed low gelatinization temperatures. Amylose contents and amylopectin branch chain‐length distributions predominantly affected the pasting properties of starch.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- A periodic distribution of the chain length of amylopectin as revealed by high-performance anion-exchange chromatographyCarbohydrate Research, 1996
- A small-angle X-ray scattering study of the annealing and gelatinization of starchPolymer, 1992
- Recent Advances in Knowledge of Starch StructureStarch ‐ Stärke, 1991
- Retrogradation of amylopectin and the effects of amylose and added surfactants/emulsifiersCarbohydrate Polymers, 1990
- Factors affecting the crystalline type (AC) of native starches and model compounds: a rationalisation of observed effects in terms of polymorphic structuresCarbohydrate Research, 1987
- Polymodal distribution of the chain lengths of amylopectins, and its significanceCarbohydrate Research, 1986
- Relationship between the distribution of the chain length of amylopectin and the crystalline structure of starch granulesCarbohydrate Research, 1985
- Effect of environmental temperature at the milky stage on amylose content and fine structure of amylopectin of waxy and nonwaxy endosperm starches of rice (Oryza sativa L.).Agricultural and Biological Chemistry, 1985
- Measurement of the chain length of amylopectin and its relevance to the origin of crystalline polymorphism of starch granulesBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - General Subjects, 1983
- Multi-branched nature of amylose and the action of debranching enzymesCarbohydrate Research, 1981