Journal
INDUSTRIAL CROPS AND PRODUCTS
Volume 191, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.indcrop.2022.115987
Keywords
Chain length distribution; Chain elongation; Pullulanase treatment; Long amylopectin
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This study successfully isolated long branch-chains of amylopectin through the combination treatments of preheating, pullulanase digestion, and centrifugation, which can be used for large-scale production. The increase in preheating temperature promoted starch gelatinization and pullulanase digestion, resulting in the increase of long branch-chains of amylopectin content in the collected starch.
Production of long branch-chains of amylopectin was significant to conftrol starch functionalities. Long branchchains of amylopectin were currently synthesized through amylopectin elongation by amylosucrase, but this methodology was hardly industrialized because of the difficulty in large-scale production of amylosucrase. This study aimed to establish a facile method to fractionate long branch-chains of amylopectin from waxy maize starch following preheating (58-73 & DEG;C), pullulanase digestion, and centrifugation. Results showed that amylopectin chain length was positively correlated with starch thermostability. Structures packed by short branchchains of amylopectin would be gelatinized during preheating, and then removed from starch granules by pullulanase digestion and centrifugation to collect thermostable structures rich in long branch-chains of amylopectin. The preheating at higher temperatures promoted starch gelatinization and pullulanase digestion, and in turn, increased the content of long branch-chains of amylopectin of collected starch. By the preheatingpullulanase digestion-centrifugation treatment, the content of short branch-chains of amylopectin of starch significantly decreased from 24.04% to 19.69% and starch rich in long branch-chains of amylopectin was collected. Findings verified that long branch-chains of amylopectin could be isolated from starch granules following the combination treatments of preheating, pullulanase digestion, and centrifugation.
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