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DOI: 10.1094/CCHEM-84-1-0015
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VIEW
ARTICLE
Investigation of Digestibility In Vitro and Physicochemical
Properties of A- and B-Type Starch from Soft and Hard Wheat
Flour.
Q. Liu (1,2), Z. Gu (3), E. Donner (1), I. Tetlow (4), and M.
Emes (4). (1) Food Research Program, Agriculture and Agri-Food
Canada, 93 Stone Road W., Guelph, ON, Canada N1G 5C9. (2)
Corresponding author. Phone: 519-780-8030. Fax: 519-829-2600.
E-mail: <liuq@agr.gc.ca> (3) School of Food Sci. and Technology,
Southern Yangtze University, 170 Huihe Road, Wuxi City, Jiangsu,
P.R. China. (4) Dept. of Molecular and Cellular Biology,
University of Guelph, Guelph, ON, Canada N1G 2W1. Cereal Chem.
84(1):15-21. Accepted September 6, 2006. Copyright 2007
Department of Agriculture and Agri-Food, Government of Canada.
In this study, the functional properties of A- and B-type wheat
starch granules from two commercial wheat flours were
investigated for digestibility in vitro, chemical composition
(e.g., amylose, protein, and ash content), gelatinization,
retrogradation, and pasting properties. The branch chain length
and chain length distribution of these A- and B-type wheat
starch granules were also determined using high-performance
anion exchange chromatography (HPAEC). Wheat starches with
different granular sizes not only had different degrees of
enzymatic hydrolysis and thermal and pasting properties, but
also different molecular characteristics. Different amylose
content, protein content, and branch chain length of amylopectin
in A- and B-type wheat starch granules could also be the major
factors besides granular size for different digestibility and
other functional properties of starch. The data indicate that
different wheat cultivars with different proportion of A- and
B-type granular starch could result in different digestibility
in wheat products.
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