Literature DB >> 11958336

Food-derived carbohydrates--structural complexity and functional diversity.

Rudrapatnam N Tharanathan1.   

Abstract

Carbohydrates are biomolecules abundantly available in nature. They are found in bewildering types ranging from simple sugars through oligo- and polysaccharides to glycoconjugates and saccharide complexes, each exhibiting characteristic bio-physiological and/or nutritional functions both in in vivo and in vitro systems. For example, their presence or inclusion in food dictates the texture (body) and gives desirable customer appeal (satisfaction), or their inclusion in the diet offers beneficial effects of great therapeutic value. Thus, carbohydrates are integrally involved in a multitude of biological functions such as regulation of the immune system, cellular signaling (communication), cell malignancy, antiinfection responses, host-pathogen interactions, etc. If starch is considered the major energy storage carbohydrate, the gums/mucilages and other non-starch carbohydrates are of structural significance. The most investigated properties of starch are its gelatinization and melting behavior, especially during food processing. This has led to the development of the food polymer science approach, which has enabled a new interpretive and experimental frame work for the study of the plasticizing influence of simple molecules such as water, sugars, etc. on food systems that are kinetically constrained. Starch, although considered fully digestible, has been challenged, and starch is found to be partly indigestible in the GI tract of humans. This fraction of starch-resisting digestion in vivo is known as resistant starch (RS). The latter, due to its excellent fermentative capacity in the gut, especially yielding butyric acid is considered a new tool for the creation of fiber-rich foods, which are of nutraceutical importance. By a careful control of the processing conditions the content of RS, a man-made fiber, can be increased to as high as 30%. Arabinoxylans are the major endospermic cell wall polysaccharides of cereals. In wheat they are found complexed with ferulic acid esters, which after oxidative coupling in vivo mediated by H2O2 and peroxidases or even by photochemical means give cross linked diferuloyl derivatives. The latter confer strength and extensibility to the cell wall and offer resistance for digestibility by ruminants. They also help blocking of the ingress of pathogens. The ester bound ferulic acid after oxidation in vivo generates reactive oxygen species that contribute to the fragmentation of non-starch polysaccharides (hemicelluloses), and thereby reduces the product viscosity, a property seen during long-term storage of rice. In plant tissues, the arabinogalactans are implicated in such diverse functions as cell-cell adhesion, nutrition of growing pollen tubes, response to microbial infections, and also as markers of identity expressed in the terminal sequences of saccharide chains.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11958336     DOI: 10.1080/07388550290789469

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Crit Rev Biotechnol        ISSN: 0738-8551            Impact factor:   8.429


  8 in total

1.  Effects of beta-glucan and resistant starch on wheat dough and prebiotic bread properties.

Authors:  Zahra Mohebbi; Aziz Homayouni; Mohammad Hossein Azizi; Sayyed Javad Hosseini
Journal:  J Food Sci Technol       Date:  2017-11-29       Impact factor: 2.701

2.  Degradation of cross-linked and non-cross-linked arabinoxylans by the intestinal microbiota in children.

Authors:  Mark J Hopkins; Hans N Englyst; Sandra Macfarlane; Elizabeth Furrie; George T Macfarlane; Andrew J McBain
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2003-11       Impact factor: 4.792

3.  The effect of resistant dextrin as a prebiotic on metabolic parameters and androgen level in women with polycystic ovarian syndrome: a randomized, triple-blind, controlled, clinical trial.

Authors:  Sevda Gholizadeh Shamasbi; Parvin Dehgan; Sakineh Mohammad-Alizadeh Charandabi; Akbar Aliasgarzadeh; Mojgan Mirghafourvand
Journal:  Eur J Nutr       Date:  2018-02-26       Impact factor: 5.614

Review 4.  Clean label starch: production, physicochemical characteristics, and industrial applications.

Authors:  Shinjae Park; Yong-Ro Kim
Journal:  Food Sci Biotechnol       Date:  2020-11-23       Impact factor: 2.391

Review 5.  Effects of Resistant Starch Interventions on Metabolic Biomarkers in Pre-Diabetes and Diabetes Adults.

Authors:  Aswir Abd Rashed; Fatin Saparuddin; Devi-Nair Gunasegavan Rathi; Nur Najihah Mohd Nasir; Ezarul Faradianna Lokman
Journal:  Front Nutr       Date:  2022-01-12

6.  Molecular insights into how a deficiency of amylose affects carbon allocation--carbohydrate and oil analyses and gene expression profiling in the seeds of a rice waxy mutant.

Authors:  Ming-Zhou Zhang; Jie-Hong Fang; Xia Yan; Jun Liu; Jin-Song Bao; Gunnel Fransson; Roger Andersson; Christer Jansson; Per Åman; Chuanxin Sun
Journal:  BMC Plant Biol       Date:  2012-12-05       Impact factor: 4.215

7.  Effects of Hydrothermal and Microwave Dual Treatment and Zein on the Enzymolysis of High Amylose Corn Starch.

Authors:  Jie Liu; Qiuye Yang; Tiantian Yuan; Yawei Liu; Guihong Fang
Journal:  Gels       Date:  2022-01-04

Review 8.  Role of Phaseolus vulgaris L. in the Prevention of Cardiovascular Diseases-Cardioprotective Potential of Bioactive Compounds.

Authors:  Lyanne Rodríguez; Diego Mendez; Hector Montecino; Basilio Carrasco; Barbara Arevalo; Iván Palomo; Eduardo Fuentes
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2022-01-11
  8 in total

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