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Publication no. C-2004-0728-04R
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ARTICLE
Oil Binding of Heat-Treated Waxy Wheat Starch Granules and Starch Granule
Ghosts Produced with Concentrated KI and I(2).
M. Hayashi (1) and M. Seguchi (1,2). (1) Faculty of Home Economics, Laboratory
of Food Technology, Kobe Women's University, Suma-Ku, Kobe City, Japan. (2)
Corresponding author. E-mail: <seguchi@suma.kobe-wu.ac.jp> Cereal Chem.
81(5):621-625. Accepted May 18, 2004. Copyright 2004 American Association of
Cereal Chemists, Inc.
Dry waxy wheat starch granules were heat-treated at 120°C for 5 hr, and then
shaken vigorously in a biphasic system of oil and water. Non-heat-treated starch
remained in the aqueous phase, whereas the heat-treated starch granules showed a
strong oil-binding ability that was lost by trypsin treatment. This result
showed that the starch granule surface protein changed from hydrophilic to
hydrophobic due to the heat treatment. The presence of starch granule surface
protein was ascertained by staining with fluorescamine and fluorescence
microscopic observation. Heat-treated waxy wheat starch granules were incubated
with a 25% KI/10% I(2) (w/v) solution, which produced “ghosts” (exterior and
interior) structures. The exteriors stained red-brown, whereas the interiors
stained black-brown. Sonication (20 kHz for 255 sec) followed by centrifugation
separated the structures, which were then shaken vigorously in an oil and water
system. Only the exterior ghosts exhibited a remarkable emulsification property,
which disappeared after trypsin treatment. The ghosts from unheated control
granules did not show emulsification. The presence of protein in the exterior
ghost fraction was further substantiated by fluorescamine treatment. No protein
was detectable in the interior fraction with this dye. From these results, we
suggest that the ghost fraction of the waxy wheat starch contained the starch
granule surface protein that was made hydrophobic by heat treatment. Also, the
nature of the induced emulsification property of the exterior fraction (ghosts)
and the oil-binding ability of the heat-treated waxy wheat starch granules
coincided. Both were due to the hydrophobic nature of the same starch granule
surface protein, which showed that the ghosts were the swollen form of the outer
region of the waxy starch granule.
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