Cargando…

Starch Chemical Composition and Molecular Structure in Relation to Physicochemical Characteristics and Resistant Starch Content of Four Thai Commercial Rice Cultivars Differing in Pasting Properties

Variations in starch pasting properties, considered an alternative potential quality classification parameter for rice starches, are directly controlled by the diverse starch molecular composition and structural features. Here, the starch characteristics of four rice cultivars (i.e., RD57, RD29, KDM...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sangwongchai, Wichian, Tananuwong, Kanitha, Krusong, Kuakarun, Natee, Supidcha, Thitisaksakul, Maysaya
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9921408/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36771875
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym15030574
_version_ 1784887304901361664
author Sangwongchai, Wichian
Tananuwong, Kanitha
Krusong, Kuakarun
Natee, Supidcha
Thitisaksakul, Maysaya
author_facet Sangwongchai, Wichian
Tananuwong, Kanitha
Krusong, Kuakarun
Natee, Supidcha
Thitisaksakul, Maysaya
author_sort Sangwongchai, Wichian
collection PubMed
description Variations in starch pasting properties, considered an alternative potential quality classification parameter for rice starches, are directly controlled by the diverse starch molecular composition and structural features. Here, the starch characteristics of four rice cultivars (i.e., RD57, RD29, KDML105, and RD6) differing in pasting properties were assessed, and their relationship was determined. The results revealed that protein and moisture contents and their crystalline type were similar among the four rice starches. However, their molecular compositions and structures (i.e., reducing sugar and amylose contents, amylopectin branch chain-length distributions, granule size and size distribution, and degree of crystallinity) significantly varied among different genotypes, which resulted in distinct swelling, solubility, gelatinization, retrogradation, and hydrolytic resistance properties. The swelling power and gelatinization enthalpy (∆H) were positively correlated with C-type granule and relative crystallinity, but were negatively correlated with amylose content, B-type granule and median particle size (d(0.5)). Conversely, the water solubility and resistant starch content negatively correlated with C-type granule, but positively correlated with amylose content, B-type granule, and d(0.5). The gelatinization onset temperature (To(g)), and retrogradation concluding temperatures (Tc(r)), enthalpy (∆H(r)), and percentage (R%) were positively impacted by the amount of protein, amylose, and B1 chains (DP 13–24), while they were negatively correlated with short A chains (DP 6–12). Collectively, the starch physicochemical and functional properties of these Thai rice starches are attributed to an interplay between compositional and structural features. These results provide decisive and crucial information on rice cultivars’ suitability for consumption as cooked rice and for specific industrial applications.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9921408
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-99214082023-02-12 Starch Chemical Composition and Molecular Structure in Relation to Physicochemical Characteristics and Resistant Starch Content of Four Thai Commercial Rice Cultivars Differing in Pasting Properties Sangwongchai, Wichian Tananuwong, Kanitha Krusong, Kuakarun Natee, Supidcha Thitisaksakul, Maysaya Polymers (Basel) Article Variations in starch pasting properties, considered an alternative potential quality classification parameter for rice starches, are directly controlled by the diverse starch molecular composition and structural features. Here, the starch characteristics of four rice cultivars (i.e., RD57, RD29, KDML105, and RD6) differing in pasting properties were assessed, and their relationship was determined. The results revealed that protein and moisture contents and their crystalline type were similar among the four rice starches. However, their molecular compositions and structures (i.e., reducing sugar and amylose contents, amylopectin branch chain-length distributions, granule size and size distribution, and degree of crystallinity) significantly varied among different genotypes, which resulted in distinct swelling, solubility, gelatinization, retrogradation, and hydrolytic resistance properties. The swelling power and gelatinization enthalpy (∆H) were positively correlated with C-type granule and relative crystallinity, but were negatively correlated with amylose content, B-type granule and median particle size (d(0.5)). Conversely, the water solubility and resistant starch content negatively correlated with C-type granule, but positively correlated with amylose content, B-type granule, and d(0.5). The gelatinization onset temperature (To(g)), and retrogradation concluding temperatures (Tc(r)), enthalpy (∆H(r)), and percentage (R%) were positively impacted by the amount of protein, amylose, and B1 chains (DP 13–24), while they were negatively correlated with short A chains (DP 6–12). Collectively, the starch physicochemical and functional properties of these Thai rice starches are attributed to an interplay between compositional and structural features. These results provide decisive and crucial information on rice cultivars’ suitability for consumption as cooked rice and for specific industrial applications. MDPI 2023-01-22 /pmc/articles/PMC9921408/ /pubmed/36771875 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym15030574 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Sangwongchai, Wichian
Tananuwong, Kanitha
Krusong, Kuakarun
Natee, Supidcha
Thitisaksakul, Maysaya
Starch Chemical Composition and Molecular Structure in Relation to Physicochemical Characteristics and Resistant Starch Content of Four Thai Commercial Rice Cultivars Differing in Pasting Properties
title Starch Chemical Composition and Molecular Structure in Relation to Physicochemical Characteristics and Resistant Starch Content of Four Thai Commercial Rice Cultivars Differing in Pasting Properties
title_full Starch Chemical Composition and Molecular Structure in Relation to Physicochemical Characteristics and Resistant Starch Content of Four Thai Commercial Rice Cultivars Differing in Pasting Properties
title_fullStr Starch Chemical Composition and Molecular Structure in Relation to Physicochemical Characteristics and Resistant Starch Content of Four Thai Commercial Rice Cultivars Differing in Pasting Properties
title_full_unstemmed Starch Chemical Composition and Molecular Structure in Relation to Physicochemical Characteristics and Resistant Starch Content of Four Thai Commercial Rice Cultivars Differing in Pasting Properties
title_short Starch Chemical Composition and Molecular Structure in Relation to Physicochemical Characteristics and Resistant Starch Content of Four Thai Commercial Rice Cultivars Differing in Pasting Properties
title_sort starch chemical composition and molecular structure in relation to physicochemical characteristics and resistant starch content of four thai commercial rice cultivars differing in pasting properties
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9921408/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36771875
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym15030574
work_keys_str_mv AT sangwongchaiwichian starchchemicalcompositionandmolecularstructureinrelationtophysicochemicalcharacteristicsandresistantstarchcontentoffourthaicommercialricecultivarsdifferinginpastingproperties
AT tananuwongkanitha starchchemicalcompositionandmolecularstructureinrelationtophysicochemicalcharacteristicsandresistantstarchcontentoffourthaicommercialricecultivarsdifferinginpastingproperties
AT krusongkuakarun starchchemicalcompositionandmolecularstructureinrelationtophysicochemicalcharacteristicsandresistantstarchcontentoffourthaicommercialricecultivarsdifferinginpastingproperties
AT nateesupidcha starchchemicalcompositionandmolecularstructureinrelationtophysicochemicalcharacteristicsandresistantstarchcontentoffourthaicommercialricecultivarsdifferinginpastingproperties
AT thitisaksakulmaysaya starchchemicalcompositionandmolecularstructureinrelationtophysicochemicalcharacteristicsandresistantstarchcontentoffourthaicommercialricecultivarsdifferinginpastingproperties