4.7 Article

Physicochemical properties of a new starch from ramie (Boehmeria nivea) root

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES
Volume 174, Issue -, Pages 392-401

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2021.01.205

Keywords

Ramie; Starch; Morphology; Component; Structure; Properties

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31570324]
  2. Talent Project of Yangzhou University

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A new starch was isolated from ramie root, which had various physicochemical properties such as granule shapes, crystalline structure, solubility, and viscosity. Compared to potato starch, ramie starch was somewhat similar but significantly different from rice starch. Ramie starch showed potential to be used as a thickening agent, resistant-digesting food additive, and alternative to potato starch.
A new starch was isolated from ramie root, and its physicochemical properties were investigated. Ramie dry root contained 45.9% starch. Starch had truncated, ellipsoidal, and spherical granule shapes with size from 7 to 30 mu m and D[4,3] about 14.1 mu m. Starch contained 38.9% apparent amylose content and 22.4% true amylose content, exhibited B-type crystallinity, and had 26.6% relative crystallinity, 0.82 ordered degree, and 9.2 nm lamellar thickness. Starch had 71.8 degrees C gelatinization peak temperature and 15.6 J/g gelatinization enthalpy, and exhibited 31.4 gig swelling power and 17.1% water solubility at 95 degrees C. Starch had peak, hot, breakdown, final, and setback viscosities at 3048, 2768, 279, 4165, and 1397 mPa s, respectively, and showed peak time at 4.36 min and pasting temperature at 75.0 degrees C. The native, gelatinized, and retrograded starches contained 15.1%, 94.0%, and 86.5% rapidly digestible starch and 83.3%, 4.0%, and 10.7% resistant starch, respectively. Compared with potato and rice starches, ramie starch was somewhat similar to potato starch but significantly different from rice starch in starch component, crystalline structure, and functional properties. Therefore, ramie starch exhibited the potential to be used as a thickening agent, resistant-digesting food additive, and alternative to potato starch in food and nonfood industries. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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