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result(s) for
"Starch - classification"
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Resistant Starch Type 2 from Wheat Reduces Postprandial Glycemic Response with Concurrent Alterations in Gut Microbiota Composition
by
Marco, Maria L.
,
Finnegan, Peter
,
Newman, John W.
in
Adult
,
Bacteria - classification
,
Bacteria - genetics
2021
The majority of research on the physiological effects of dietary resistant starch type 2 (RS2) has focused on sources derived from high-amylose maize. In this study, we conduct a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, crossover trial investigating the effects of RS2 from wheat on glycemic response, an important indicator of metabolic health, and the gut microbiota. Overall, consumption of RS2-enriched wheat rolls for one week resulted in reduced postprandial glucose and insulin responses relative to conventional wheat when participants were provided with a standard breakfast meal containing the respective treatment rolls (RS2-enriched or conventional wheat). This was accompanied by an increase in the proportions of bacterial taxa Ruminococcus and Gemmiger in the fecal contents, reflecting the composition in the distal intestine. Additionally, fasting breath hydrogen and methane were increased during RS2-enriched wheat consumption. However, although changes in fecal short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) concentrations were not significant between control and RS-enriched wheat roll consumption, butyrate and total SCFAs were positively correlated with relative abundance of Faecalibacterium, Ruminoccocus, Roseburia, and Barnesiellaceae. These effects show that RS2-enriched wheat consumption results in a reduction in postprandial glycemia, altered gut microbial composition, and increased fermentation activity relative to wild-type wheat.
Journal Article
In vitro digestion of starches in a dynamic gastrointestinal model: an innovative study to optimize dietary management of patients with hepatic glycogen storage diseases
by
Derks, Terry G. J.
,
Perry, Ingrid D. S.
,
Venema, Koen
in
Biochemistry
,
Digestion - physiology
,
Glucose - metabolism
2015
Uncooked cornstarch (UCCS) is a widely used treatment strategy for patients with hepatic glycogen storage disease (GSD). It has been observed that GSD-patients display different metabolic responses to different cornstarches. The objective was to characterize starch fractions and analyze the digestion of different starches in a dynamic gastrointestinal in vitro model. The following brands of UCCS were studied: Argo® and Great Value® from the United States of America; Brazilian Maizena Duryea® and Yoki® from Brazil; Dutch Maizena Duryea® from the Netherlands. Glycosade®, a modified starch, and sweet polvilho, a Brazilian starch extracted from cassava, were also studied. The starch fractions were analyzed by glycemic TNO index method and digestion analyses were determined by the TIM-1 system, a dynamic, computer-controlled, in vitro gastrointestinal model, which simulates the stomach and small intestine. The final digested amounts were between 84 and 86 % for the UCCS and Glycosade®, but was 75.5 % for sweet povilho. At 180 min of the experiment, an important time-point for GSD patients, the digested amount of the starches corresponded to 67.9–71.5 for the UCCS and Glycosade®, while it was 55.5 % for sweet povilho. In an experiment with a mixture of sweet polvilho and Brazilian Maizena Duryea®, a final digested amount of 78.4 % was found, while the value at 180 min was 61.7 %. Sweet polvilho seems to have a slower and extended release of glucose and looks like an interesting product to be further studied as it might lead to extended normoglycemia in GSD-patients.
Journal Article
Differences in specificity and compensatory functions among three major starch synthases determine the structure of amylopectin in rice endosperm
by
Sugimoto, Kyohei
,
Fujita, Naoko
,
Oitome, Naoko F.
in
Amylopectin
,
Amylopectin - chemistry
,
Amylopectin - metabolism
2017
The lengths of amylopectin-branched chains are precise and influence the physicochemical properties of starch, which determine starch functionality. Three major isozymes of starch synthases (SSs), SSI, SSII(a), and SSIII(a), are primarily responsible for amylopectin chain elongation in the storage tissues of plants. To date, the majority of reported rice mutants were generated using japonica cultivars, which have almost inactive SSIIa. Although three SSs share some overlapping chain length preferences, whether they complement each other remains unknown due to the absence of suitable genetic combinations of materials. In this study, rice
ss1
/
SS2a
/
SS3a
and
SS1
/
SS2a
/
ss3a
were newly generated, and the chain length distribution patterns of all the possible combinations of presence and absence of SSI, SSIIa, and SSIIIa activities were compared. This study demonstrated that SSIIa can complement most SSI functions that use glucan chains with DP 6–7 to generate DP 8–12 chains but cannot fully compensate for the elongation of DP 16–19 chains. This suggests that SSIIa preferentially elongates outer but not inner chains of amylopectin. In addition, the results revealed that neither SSI nor SSIIIa compensate for SSIIa. Neither SSI nor SSIIa compensate for elongation of DP >30 by SSIIIa. SSIIa could not resolve the pleiotropic increase of SSI caused by the absence of SSIIIa; instead, SSIIa further elongated those branches elongated by SSI. These results revealed compensatory differences among three major SS isozymes responsible for lengths of amylopectin branches.
Journal Article
Genetic relatedness among indigenous rice varieties in the Eastern Himalayan region based on nucleotide sequences of the Waxy gene
by
Dayanandan, Selvadurai
,
Choudhury, Baharul I
,
Khan, Mohammed L
in
Annealing
,
Base Sequence
,
Bayes Theorem
2014
Background
Indigenous rice varieties in the Eastern Himalayan region of Northeast India are traditionally classified into
sali
,
boro
and
jum
ecotypes based on geographical locality and the season of cultivation. In this study, we used DNA sequence data from the
Waxy
(
Wx
) gene to infer the genetic relatedness among indigenous rice varieties in Northeast India and to assess the genetic distinctiveness of ecotypes.
Findings
The results of all three analyses (Bayesian, Maximum Parsimony and Neighbor Joining) were congruent and revealed two genetically distinct clusters of rice varieties in the region. The large group comprised several varieties of
sali
and
boro
ecotypes, and all agronomically improved varieties. The small group consisted of only traditionally cultivated indigenous rice varieties, which included one
boro
, few
sali
and all
jum
varieties. The fixation index analysis revealed a very low level of differentiation between
sali
and
boro
(
F
ST
= 0.005), moderate differentiation between
sali
and
jum
(
F
ST
= 0.108) and high differentiation between
jum
and
boro
(
F
ST
= 0.230) ecotypes.
Conclusion
The genetic relatedness analyses revealed that
sali
,
boro
and
jum
ecotypes are genetically heterogeneous, and the current classification based on cultivation type is not congruent with the genetic background of rice varieties. Indigenous rice varieties chosen from genetically distinct clusters could be used in breeding programs to improve genetic gain through heterosis, while maintaining high genetic diversity.
Journal Article
56-kDa protein is a novel granule-bound starch synthase existing in the pericarps, aleurone layers, and embryos of immature seed in diploid wheat (Triticum monococcum L.)
by
Taira, T
,
Fujita, N
in
Agronomy. Soil science and plant productions
,
Aleurone layer
,
Amino Acid Sequence
1998
A novel 56-kDa granule-bound starch synthase (GBSS; NDPglucose-starch glucosyltransferase, EC 2.4.1.21) responsible for amylose synthesis was found in the pericarps, aleurone layers and embryos of immature dip bid wheat (Triticum monococcum L.). The GBSS and other proteins bound to starch granules of various tissues of immature normal and waxy diploid wheat seeds were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and their activities were examined. In the waxy mutant, the waxy protein (59.5 kDa, GBSSI) was absent, but amylose and GBSS activity were evident in all tissues except the endosperm. Of the proteins bound to starch granules, only the 56-kDa protein was associated with the presence of amylose and GBSS activities in the pen-carps. aleurone layers and embryos. Mutations at the waxy locus did not affect the 56-kDa protein in these tissues. Changes in the amount of 56-kDa protein during the course of seed development, and the distribution of the 56-kDa protein in each tissue of immature seeds were quite different from those of the waxy protein. On the other hand, the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the 56-kDa protein had a 40-50% similarity to GBSSI of some other plant species and was antigenically related to the waxy protein. These results strongly suggest that the 56-kDa protein in diploid wheat is a GBSSI class enzyme and, hence, an isoform of the waxy protein. The waxy protein and 56-kDa protein, however, are expressed in different seed tissues and at different stages of seed development.
Journal Article
Granule-bound starch synthase cDNA in Chlorella kessleri 11 h: cloning and regulation of expression by CO(2) concentration
by
Tsuzuki, Mikio
,
Shimonaga, Takahiro
,
Izumo, Asako
in
Algal Proteins - classification
,
Algal Proteins - genetics
,
Algal Proteins - metabolism
2006
The cDNA for the granule-bound starch synthase (GBSS; ADP-glucose-starch glucosyltransferase, EC 2.4.1.21) of Chlorella kessleri 11 h was isolated and characterized. CkGBSS encodes a 609-amino acid polypeptide (65,627 Da) that includes an N-terminal hydrophobic signal peptide of 55 amino acids. The deduced amino acid sequence of the mature CkGBSS polypeptide shares a greater identity (65%) to that of the GBSS protein of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, than to those of vascular plant species, but does not have the extra-long C-terminal sequence found in C. reinhardtii. When CO(2 )concentration was decreased from 3 to 0.04% (air level) in light, the levels of CkGBSS mRNA, CkGBSS protein, and GBSS activity increased. Under this condition, pyrenoid and pyrenoid starch developed, and the relative amount of amylose in starch increased. These observations suggest that low CO(2) level up-regulates GBSS biosynthesis at the transcriptional level.
Journal Article
The defective effect of starch branching enzyme IIb from weak to strong induces the formation of biphasic starch granules in amylose-extender maize endosperm
2020
KeymessageBiphasic starch granules in maize ae mutant underwent the weak to strong SBEIIb-defective effect during endosperm development, leading to no birefringence in their exterior due to extended long branch-chains of amylopectin.Biphasic starch granules are usually detected regionally in cereal endosperm lacking starch branching enzyme (SBE). However, their molecular structure, formation mechanism, and regional distribution are unclear. In this research, biphasic starch granules were observed in the inner region of crown endosperm of maize ae mutant, and had poorly oriented structure with comb-like profiles in their exterior. The inner endosperm (IE) rich in biphasic starch granules and outer endosperm (OE) without biphasic starch granules were investigated. The starch had lower amylose content and higher proportion of long branch-chains of amylopectin in IE than in OE, and the exterior of biphasic starch granules had less amylose and more long branch-chains of amylopectin than the interior. Compared with OE, the expression pattern of starch synthesis related enzymes changed significantly in IE. The granule-bound starch synthase I activity within biphasic starch granules decreased slightly. The IE experienced more severe hypoxic stress than OE, and the up-regulated anaerobic respiration pathway indicated an increase in carbon consumption. The starch in IE underwent the SBEIIb-defective effect from weak to strong due to the lack of sufficient carbon inflow, leading to the formation of biphasic starch granules and their regional distribution in endosperm. The results provided information for understanding the biphasic starch granules.
Journal Article
Dietary fibers as beneficial microbiota modulators: A proposed classification by prebiotic categories
by
Rezende, Esther Santana Vaz
,
Naves, Maria Margareth Veloso
,
Lima, Glaucia Carielo
in
Bacteria
,
Carbohydrates
,
Categories
2021
Dietary fiber is a group of heterogeneous substances that are neither digested nor absorbed in the small intestine. Some fibers can be classified as prebiotics if they are metabolized by beneficial bacteria present in the hindgut microbiota. The aim of this review was to specify the prebiotic properties of different subgroups of dietary fibers (resistant oligosaccharides, non-starch polysaccharides, resistant starches, and associated substances) to classify them by prebiotic categories. Currently, only resistant oligosaccharides (fructans [fructooligosaccharides, oligofructose, and inulin] and galactans) are well documented as prebiotics in the literature. Other fibers are considered candidates to prebiotics or have prebiotic potential, and apparently some have no prebiotic effect on humans. This dietary fiber classification by the prebiotic categories contributes to a better understanding of these concepts in the literature, to the stimulation of the processing and consumption of foods rich in fiber and other products with prebiotic properties, and to the development of protocols and guidelines on food sources of prebiotics.
•“Dietary fiber” and “prebiotic” are not synonyms since not all fiber acts as a prebiotic.•Currently, only fructans (fructooligosaccharides and inulin) and galactans are classified as prebiotics.•Fibers can be categorized in prebiotic, candidate to prebiotic, and not recognized as prebiotic.•More clinical studies should be conducted with dietary fibers classified as candidates to prebiotic.
Journal Article