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      Causal relations among starch fine molecular structure, lamellar/crystalline structure and in vitro digestion kinetics of native rice starch

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          Abstract

          Causal relations among starch fine molecular structures, lamellar/crystalline structures, and the in vitro digestion kinetics of native rice starches.

          Abstract

          Native rice starch is a source of slowly digestible starch in e.g. low-moisture baked products, while the molecular and lamellar/crystalline structure giving rise to this low-digestibility property is still largely unknown. In this study, the in vitro digestion kinetics of 11 rice starches with a wide range of amylose content were investigated. Applying the logarithm of slope (LOS) plot to the starch digestograms suggested that only a single first-order kinetics phase existed. More importantly, results for the first time showed that rice starches with shorter amylopectin short chains (DP 10–26) had more perfectly aligned crystalline lamellae and much slower digestion rates than the other starches. Interestingly, no correlations were found between the starch lamellar thicknesses with its digestion rate. It suggests that lamellar perfection plays a dominant role in the determination of native starch digestibility. Furthermore, starches with relatively shorter amylose short and medium chains showed a significantly higher amount of V-type amylose–lipid complex, and smaller maximum digestion extent. These results could help the rice industry develop a new generation of rice products with slower starch digestion rate and more desirable nutritional values.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Journal
          FFOUAI
          Food & Function
          Food Funct.
          Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
          2042-6496
          2042-650X
          February 1 2021
          2021
          : 12
          : 2
          : 682-695
          Affiliations
          [1 ]School of Medical Instrument and Food Engineering
          [2 ]University of Shanghai for Science and Technology
          [3 ]Shanghai 200093
          [4 ]China
          [5 ]Department of Pathology
          [6 ]Zhongshan Hospital
          [7 ]Fudan University
          [8 ]Shanghai 200031
          [9 ]Key Laboratory of Plant Functional Genomics of the Ministry of Education
          [10 ]Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Crop Genetics and Physiology
          [11 ]College of Agriculture
          [12 ]Yangzhou University
          [13 ]Yangzhou 225009
          Article
          10.1039/D0FO02934C
          33410441
          c1e37306-dad6-4827-bc7c-ad0d24224576
          © 2021

          http://rsc.li/journals-terms-of-use

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