| Literature DB >> 27128366 |
Changquan Zhang1, Lihui Zhou1,2, Zhengbin Zhu3, Huwen Lu1, Xingzhong Zhou1, Yiting Qian1, Qianfeng Li1, Yan Lu1, Minghong Gu1, Qiaoquan Liu1.
Abstract
Temperature during the growing season is a critical factor affecting grain quality. High temperatures at grain filling affect kernel development, resulting in reduced yield, increased chalkiness, reduced amylose content, and poor milling quality. Here, we investigated the grain quality and starch structure of two japonica rice cultivars with good sensory properties grown at different temperatures during the filling stage under natural field conditions. Compared to those grown under normal conditions, rice grains grown under hot conditions showed significantly reduced eating and cooking qualities, including a higher percentage of grains with chalkiness, lower protein and amylose contents, and higher pasting properties. Under hot conditions, rice starch contained reduced long-chain amylose (MW 10(7.1) to 10(7.4)) and significantly fewer short-chain amylopectin (DP 5-12) but more intermediate- (DP 13-34) and long- (DP 45-60) chain amylopectin than under normal conditions, as well as higher crystallinity and gelatinization properties.Entities:
Keywords: Oryza sativa; climate change; eating and cooking quality; field; rice; starch fine structure
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27128366 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.6b00083
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Agric Food Chem ISSN: 0021-8561 Impact factor: 5.279