| Literature DB >> 28764089 |
Dawei Zhu1, Haiyan Wei1, Baowei Guo1, Qigen Dai1, Cunxu Wei1, Hui Gao1, Yajie Hu1, Peiyuan Cui1, Min Li2, Zhongyang Huo1, Ke Xu3, Hongcheng Zhang4.
Abstract
This study investigates the effect of chilling stress, over a period of three days after anthesis, on the physicochemical properties of starches derived from six rice cultivars. Chilling stress significantly affected the grain characteristics and physicochemical properties of rice starches, except for those of two varieties, NJ 9108 and ZD 18. In the other four rice cultivars subjected to chilling stress, the content of medium, and large sized granules showed a decrease, and an increase, respectively. Amylose content increased as a result of chilling stress, thereby resulting in starch with a lower swelling power, water solubility, and higher retrogradation enthalpy and gelatinization temperature. Chilling stress led to deterioration of cooked rice quality as determined by the pasting properties of starch. This study indicated that among the cultivars studied, the two rice varieties most resistant to chilling stress after rice anthesis were NJ 9108 and ZD 18.Entities:
Keywords: Chilling stress; Pasting properties; Rice starch; Thermal properties
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28764089 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2017.06.039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514