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Variance of Zein Protein and Starch Granule Morphology between Corn and Steam Flaked Products Determined Starch Ruminal Degradability Through Altering Starch Hydrolyzing Bacteria Attachment

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Previously, we found that starch ruminal degradation kinetics between raw and steam flaked corn were significantly different, but the mechanism is still ambiguous. Currently, we have demonstrated that γ-zein protein, encapsulating the starch granules into the hydrophobic starch–prote...

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Autores principales: Xu, NingNing, Wang, DiMing, Liu, JianXin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6769831/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31470611
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani9090626
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author Xu, NingNing
Wang, DiMing
Liu, JianXin
author_facet Xu, NingNing
Wang, DiMing
Liu, JianXin
author_sort Xu, NingNing
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Previously, we found that starch ruminal degradation kinetics between raw and steam flaked corn were significantly different, but the mechanism is still ambiguous. Currently, we have demonstrated that γ-zein protein, encapsulating the starch granules into the hydrophobic starch–protein matrix, and starch granule characteristics were dramatically different between raw and steam flaked corns. Along with the totally different abundance and procedures of starch hydrolyzing bacteria attached to the two grain types, we concluded that γ-zein protein content and starch granule morphology of corn grain determined starch ruminal degradation kinetics through altering the abundance and procedure of starch hydrolyzing bacteria attached to corn grain in rumen. ABSTRACT: The current study investigated differences of γ-zein protein contents and starch granule characteristics between raw and steam flaked corns and their influences on ruminal starch hydrolyzing bacteria (SHB) attached to corn grain. Two types of raw (Corn1 and Corn2) and their steam-flaked products (SFCorn1 and SFCorn2) were applied to explore physiochemical structures and SHB attachment. SDS-PAGE was conducted to detect γ-zein protein patterns, scanning electron microscope, and small angle X-ray scattering were performed to obtain starch granule morphology, while crystallinity, DQ starch, and DAPI staining were applied to quantify SHB. The steam flaking process destroyed γ-zein proteins and gelatinized starch granules. The median particle size of Corn1 and Corn2 starch granules increased from 17.8 and 18.0 μm to 30.8 and 26.0 μm, but crystallinity decreased from 22.0 and 25.0% to 9.9 and 16.9%, respectively. The percentage of SHB attached to Corn1 residues decreased (p = 0.01) after 4 h incubation, but SHB attached to SFCorn1 residues increased (p = 0.03) after 12 h incubation. Thus, the differences of γ-zein proteins and starch granule physiochemical structures between raw and steam flaked corn played an important role in improving the rate and extent of starch ruminal degradation through altering the process of SHB attached to corn.
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spelling pubmed-67698312019-10-30 Variance of Zein Protein and Starch Granule Morphology between Corn and Steam Flaked Products Determined Starch Ruminal Degradability Through Altering Starch Hydrolyzing Bacteria Attachment Xu, NingNing Wang, DiMing Liu, JianXin Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Previously, we found that starch ruminal degradation kinetics between raw and steam flaked corn were significantly different, but the mechanism is still ambiguous. Currently, we have demonstrated that γ-zein protein, encapsulating the starch granules into the hydrophobic starch–protein matrix, and starch granule characteristics were dramatically different between raw and steam flaked corns. Along with the totally different abundance and procedures of starch hydrolyzing bacteria attached to the two grain types, we concluded that γ-zein protein content and starch granule morphology of corn grain determined starch ruminal degradation kinetics through altering the abundance and procedure of starch hydrolyzing bacteria attached to corn grain in rumen. ABSTRACT: The current study investigated differences of γ-zein protein contents and starch granule characteristics between raw and steam flaked corns and their influences on ruminal starch hydrolyzing bacteria (SHB) attached to corn grain. Two types of raw (Corn1 and Corn2) and their steam-flaked products (SFCorn1 and SFCorn2) were applied to explore physiochemical structures and SHB attachment. SDS-PAGE was conducted to detect γ-zein protein patterns, scanning electron microscope, and small angle X-ray scattering were performed to obtain starch granule morphology, while crystallinity, DQ starch, and DAPI staining were applied to quantify SHB. The steam flaking process destroyed γ-zein proteins and gelatinized starch granules. The median particle size of Corn1 and Corn2 starch granules increased from 17.8 and 18.0 μm to 30.8 and 26.0 μm, but crystallinity decreased from 22.0 and 25.0% to 9.9 and 16.9%, respectively. The percentage of SHB attached to Corn1 residues decreased (p = 0.01) after 4 h incubation, but SHB attached to SFCorn1 residues increased (p = 0.03) after 12 h incubation. Thus, the differences of γ-zein proteins and starch granule physiochemical structures between raw and steam flaked corn played an important role in improving the rate and extent of starch ruminal degradation through altering the process of SHB attached to corn. MDPI 2019-08-29 /pmc/articles/PMC6769831/ /pubmed/31470611 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani9090626 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Xu, NingNing
Wang, DiMing
Liu, JianXin
Variance of Zein Protein and Starch Granule Morphology between Corn and Steam Flaked Products Determined Starch Ruminal Degradability Through Altering Starch Hydrolyzing Bacteria Attachment
title Variance of Zein Protein and Starch Granule Morphology between Corn and Steam Flaked Products Determined Starch Ruminal Degradability Through Altering Starch Hydrolyzing Bacteria Attachment
title_full Variance of Zein Protein and Starch Granule Morphology between Corn and Steam Flaked Products Determined Starch Ruminal Degradability Through Altering Starch Hydrolyzing Bacteria Attachment
title_fullStr Variance of Zein Protein and Starch Granule Morphology between Corn and Steam Flaked Products Determined Starch Ruminal Degradability Through Altering Starch Hydrolyzing Bacteria Attachment
title_full_unstemmed Variance of Zein Protein and Starch Granule Morphology between Corn and Steam Flaked Products Determined Starch Ruminal Degradability Through Altering Starch Hydrolyzing Bacteria Attachment
title_short Variance of Zein Protein and Starch Granule Morphology between Corn and Steam Flaked Products Determined Starch Ruminal Degradability Through Altering Starch Hydrolyzing Bacteria Attachment
title_sort variance of zein protein and starch granule morphology between corn and steam flaked products determined starch ruminal degradability through altering starch hydrolyzing bacteria attachment
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6769831/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31470611
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani9090626
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