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Publication no. C-2004-0325-04R
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ARTICLE
Slowly Digestible Starch from Debranched Waxy Sorghum Starch: Preparation and
Properties.
Sang Ick Shin (1), Hea Jin Choi (1), Koo Min Chung (2), Bruce R. Hamaker
(3), Kwan Hwa Park (1), and Tae Wha Moon (1,4). (1) National Laboratory for
Functional Food Carbohydrate, School of Agricultural Biotechnology, and Center
for Agricultural Biomaterials, Seoul National University, Seoul 151-742, Korea.
(2) School of Bioresource, College of Natural Science, Andong National
University, Andong 760-749, Korea. (3) Department of Food Science and Whistler
Center for Carbohydrate Research, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907.
(4) Corresponding author. Phone: 82-2-880-4854. Fax: 82-2-873-5095. E-mail:
<twmoon@snu.ac.kr> Cereal Chem. 81(3):404-408. Accepted January 3, 2004.
Copyright 2004 American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc.
Effects of debranching time, storage time, and storage temperature on production
and structural properties of slowly digestible starch (SDS) were investigated.
Waxy sorghum starch was hydrolyzed by isoamylase for various times (0–24 hr),
and the variously debranched products were stored at –30, 1, and 30°C for 1–6
days. Optimal conditions for SDS production were isoamylase treatment for 8 hr
and storage at 1°C for three days, resulting in SDS content of 27.0% in the
optimum product. Microscopic observation revealed that rapidly digestible starch
(RDS) and SDS were removed from the edges and surfaces of the optimum product by
alpha-amylase digestion. Digestion conditions that removed RDS and SDS resulted
in a residue with a higher transition temperature and enthalpy than raw starch
on a differential scanning calorimetric thermogram. Removal of RDS alone did not
cause distinct decrements of peak temperature (T(p)) and enthalpy (DeltaH)
compared with stored starch. The optimum SDS product showed an amorphous type of
X-ray diffractogram. Digestive removal of RDS from the optimum product gave a
residue with X-ray peaks similar to B type, which supports that it is partly
crystalline. Removal of RDS and SDS gave broader peaks in the X-ray pattern.
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