4.7 Article

Starch structural and functional properties of waxy maize under different temperature regimes at grain formation stage

Journal

FOOD CHEMISTRY-X
Volume 16, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.fochx.2022.100463

Keywords

Amylopectin chain-length; Heat stress; Retrogradation; Starch granule morphology

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32071958, 31771709]
  2. Jiangsu Agricultural Industry Technology System [JATS[2022]497]
  3. Key Research & Development Program of Jiangsu Province [BE2021317]
  4. Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions
  5. High-end Talent Support Program of Yangzhou University

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Global warming affects crop productivity and deteriorates the physicochemical properties of waxy maize starch, leading to a decline in pasting and retrogradation properties.
Global warming affects crop productivity, but the influence is uncertain under different temperature regimes. The impact of growth temperatures (T0, 28 degrees C/20 degrees C; T1, 32 degrees C/24 degrees C; T2, 36 degrees C/28 degrees C; T3, 40 degrees C/32 degrees C) at grain formation stage on the waxy maize starch physicochemical properties of Suyunuo5 (heat-sensitive hybrid) and Yunuo7 (heat-tolerant hybrid) was studied. Compared with T0, T2 and T3 resulted in a higher number of starch granules with more pitted or uneven surface due to the enhanced enzymatic activities of alpha-amylase and beta-amylase. Meanwhile, large starch granule size, long amylopectin chain-length, and high relative crystallinity under T2 and T3 resulted in low pasting viscosities and gelatinization enthalpy and high retrogradation percentage, especially under T3. The low coefficient variation of gelatinization temperatures indicated that the differences were meaninglessness. The influence of T1 on the pasting viscosities were more obvious in Suyunuo5. In conclusion, high temperatures at grain formation stage deteriorated the starch pasting and retrogradation properties.

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