| Literature DB >> 34371274 |
Hongrui Sun1, Jieying Fan1, Zhigang Tian1, Linyuan Ma2, Yue Meng1, Zhiqiang Yang1, Xianpeng Zeng1, Xiangying Liu3, Lining Kang4, Xiping Nan5.
Abstract
In order to determine the mechanisms underlying resistant starch formation, three treatments were used to prepare resistant starch from purple sweet potato. The resistant starch yield, amylose content, chain length distribution, thermal properties, and crystal structure were determined, and the results were compared with those of unmodified starch. Autoclaving, pullulanase, and pullulanase-autoclaving treatments significantly increased the resistant starch yield, amylose content, shorter amylopectin branch content, and gelatinisation temperatures of native purple sweet potato starch. Resistant starch prepared via pullulanase-autoclaving combination treatment exhibited the highest gelatinisation enthalpy value and the greatest degree of overall thermal stability. X-ray diffraction patterns and Fourier-transform infrared spectra analysis demonstrated that all three treatments transformed the starch crystalline structure from C-type to B-type, and no new groups were generated during the modification process; all the processes were only physical modifications.Entities:
Keywords: Autoclaving; Pullulanase; Purple sweet potato; Resistant starch; Structure characterisation
Year: 2021 PMID: 34371274 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2021.130580
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514