4.3 Article

Effects of Variations in Starch Synthase on Starch Properties and Eating Quality of Rice

Journal

PLANT PRODUCTION SCIENCE
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages 472-480

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1626/pps.11.472

Keywords

Amylopectin; Amylose; Cooked rice quality; Near-isogenic line; Rice (Oryza satriva L.); Starch properties; Starch synthase

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We evaluated the effects of functional variation in three starch synthases in rice (Oryza sativa L.) granule-bound starch synthase I (GBSSI, wx), starch synthase I (SSI, SSI), and starch synthase IIa (SSIIa, alk)-between indica cultivar Kasalath and japonica cultivar Nipponbare on starch properties and eating quality. We used three near-isogenic lines-NIL(Wx(a)), NIL(SSIk), and NIL(Alk)-containing chromosomal segments of Kasalath on a Nipponbare genetic background. The HOC allele explained most of the difference in amylose content between the two cultivars, and decreased the peak viscosity and breakdown to less than half of those of Nipponbare. These changes reduced the quality of cooked rice both just after cooking and after storage at 5 degrees C. The variation in SSlla also affected We eating quality after storage of cooked rice at 5 degrees C: NIL(Alk) became harder and less sticky than Nipponbare, although the rices were comparable just after cooking. Differential scanning calorimetry revealed faster retrogradation of the once-gelatinized starch in NIL(Alk). The variation in SSI alleles hardly affected these properties.

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