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Influence of molecular structure on the susceptibility of starch to α-amylase
The effect of the molecular structure of sweet potato (SPS), cassava (CAS) and high amylose maize (HAS) starches on the susceptibility to fungal and maltogenic α-amylases was investigated. The logarithm of the slope (LOS) and non-linear least-squares (NLLS) methods were used for fitting hydrolysis k...
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Published in: | Carbohydrate research 2019-06, Vol.479, p.23-30 |
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Main Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The effect of the molecular structure of sweet potato (SPS), cassava (CAS) and high amylose maize (HAS) starches on the susceptibility to fungal and maltogenic α-amylases was investigated. The logarithm of the slope (LOS) and non-linear least-squares (NLLS) methods were used for fitting hydrolysis kinetics data. The malto-oligosaccharides released during hydrolysis were quantified and the hydrolysis residues were analyzed. The hydrolysis kinetic curves were well fitted to the LOS and NLLS models. SPS, CAS and HAS were hydrolyzed in one single phase by fungal α-amylase while two hydrolysis phases were identified for the root starches and a single phase for HAS, when maltogenic α-amylase was used. The lowest percentage of residual starch was found for CAS, independent of enzyme source, due to the high proportion of amylopectin short chains in this starch. On the other hand, the high proportion of HAS long chains contributed to its increased starch degradation rate coefficient during fungal α-amylase hydrolysis, while the high amylose content favored the endo-action pattern of maltognic α-amylase. Independent of starch source, malto-oligosaccharides of different sizes, especially G2-G5, were released after the fungal α-amylase action which hydrolyzes mainly inner and long amylopectin chains. Mainly maltose was produced in the maltogenic α-amylase hydrolysis which breaks the outer amylopectin chains by exo-action and amylose chains by endo-action. The starch molecular structure strongly interferes in both enzyme susceptibility and the action mechanism, as well as in the distribution and amount of products released.
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•Sweet potato, cassava and high amylose maize starches were hydrolyzed by α-amylases.•The hydrolysis kinetic curves were well fitted to the LOS and NLLS models.•All starches were hydrolyzed in one single phase by fungal α-amylase.•The root starches were hydrolyzed in two phases by maltogenic α-amylase.•Amylose level and chain length distribution influenced degradation rate and residual level of starch. |
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ISSN: | 0008-6215 1873-426X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.carres.2019.05.001 |