Physicochemical and structural properties of maize and potato starches as a function of granule size

Sushil Dhital, Ashok K. Shrestha, Jovin Hasjim, Michael J. Gidley

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Chemical composition, molecular structure and organization, and thermal and pasting properties of maize and potato starches fractionated on the basis of granule size were investigated to understand heterogeneity within granule populations. For both starches, lipid, protein, and mineral contents decreased and apparent amylose contents increased with granule size. Fully branched (whole) and debranched molecular size distributions in maize starch fractions were invariant with granule size. Higher amylose contents and amylopectin hydrodynamic sizes were found for larger potato starch granules, although debranched molecular size distributions did not vary. Larger granules had higher degrees of crystallinity and greater amounts of double and single helical structures. Systematic differences in pasting and thermal properties were observed with granule size. Results suggest that branch length distributions in both amylose and amylopectin fractions are under tighter biosynthetic control in potato starch than either molecular size or amylose/amylopectin ratio, whereas all three parameters are controlled during the biosynthesis of maize starch.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)10151-10161
    Number of pages11
    JournalJournal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
    Volume59
    Issue number18
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2011

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