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DOI: 10.1094/CC-83-0093
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ARTICLE
Effect of Growth Location in the United States on Amylose Content,
Amylopectin Fine Structure, and Thermal Properties of Starches of Long Grain
Rice Cultivars.
Adam Aboubacar (1), Karen A. K. Moldenhauer (2), Anna M. McClung (3), Donn H.
Beighley (4), and Bruce R. Hamaker (5,6). (1) Food and Nutrition Department,
University of Wisconsin-Stout, Menomonie, WI 54751. (2) Rice Research and
Extension Center, University of Arkansas, Stuttgart, AR 72160. (3) USDA-ARS,
Beaumont, TX 77713. (4) Department of Agriculture, Southeast Missouri State
University, Malden, MO 63863. (5) Department of Food Science and the Whistler
Center for Carbohydrate Research, Purdue University, Food Science Building, West
Lafayette, IN 47907-2009. (6) Corresponding author. Fax: 765-494-7953. E-mail:
<hamakerb@purdue.edu> Cereal Chem. 83(1):93-98. Accepted August 4, 2005. Copyright
2006 AACC International, Inc.
Starch was isolated from kernels of 27 rice samples consisting of nine U.S. long
grain rice cultivars grown in three different locations (Missouri, Arkansas,
Texas). Amylose (AM) content of the starches and the fine structure of the
respective amylopectin (AP) were determined and used to explain differences
observed in gelatinization properties. The AM content of rice cultivars grown at
the lower temperature Missouri location increased 0.4–3% and 0.5–4% when
compared with the same rices grown in Arkansas and Texas, respectively. AP
values of the rice samples were isolated, debranched, and separated by
low-pressure size-exclusion chromatography. The eluted AP linear chains were
divided into three fractions to represent extra long (FrI), long (FrII), and
short chains (FrIII). The corresponding average degree of polymerization (DP(n))
at the peaks of fractions FrI, FrII, and FrIII were 100, 39, and 16,
respectively. Total carbohydrate analysis of the fractions indicated that
cultivars grown in Missouri had a consistently higher proportion of FrIII and
lower proportion of FrII as the same cultivars grown in Arkansas and Texas.
Furthermore, the Missouri samples showed a shift toward shorter DP(n) in FrII
and FrIII and had more of the shortest chain components (DP(n) < 16) of AP. The
proportion of FrI did not follow a trend and varied depending on the cultivar
and across location. Thermal analysis indicated that the higher temperature
growth environments (Arkansas and Texas) resulted in higher onset, peak, and
heat of gelatinization for the starches, suggesting longer cooking time and
higher heat requirement. Overall, the data support the nonfield findings of
other researchers that higher growing temperature results in AP with more DP(n)
short chains that are within a range of DP >10 to form consistent crystallites,
and thus results in higher gelatinization temperatures and enthalpies.
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