Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5173743 Phytochemistry 2017 5 Pages PDF
Abstract
After removal of granular starch at low centrifugal force, the centrifugation, at increasing forces, of aqueous extracts of su1 corn gave a series of α-glucan precipitates that contained amylose. The amylose content decreased as the force increased. In contrast, in normal corn all the α-glucan precipitated as starch granules at low forces. In the sweet corn precipitates, apart from the granular starch, the branched α-glucan was phytoglycogen. The MW of this decreased as the proportion of amylose decreased. It appears that, as well as starch granules and soluble phytoglycogen, sweet corn contains granules, smaller than starch, of a range of sizes, and these are made up of phytoglycogen and amylose. As granule size decreases, so does the MW of the phytoglycogen and the content of amylose. A method of quantitative extraction of starch giving minimal depolymerization is described. The isopotential iodine absorption of a quantitative extract of sweet corn flour indicated that the total ratio of linear (amylose) fraction to branched (amylopectin + phytoglycogen) fraction was near the normal value of 1:4.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Organic Chemistry
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