Browsing by Author "Noda, Takahiro"
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Item Structural and functional properties of amaranth starches from residue obtained during protein extraction(Springer, 2021-07-26T00:00:00) Shevkani, Khetan; Singh, Narpinder; Isono, Naoto; Noda, TakahiroThe present study evaluated Amaranthus caudatus (AC) and A. hypochondriacus (AH) starches obtained as coproduct during protein extraction for composition, granule size, amylopectin fine structure, thermal, retrogradation, pasting and dynamic rheological-properties to elucidate structure-function relationships. The starches exhibited unimodal particle size distribution with mean granule size of 1.26�3.12�?m. AC starch with larger granules (mean granule size 3.12�?m) than AH starches (1.26�1.59�?m) gelatinized at lower temperatures (lower DSC transition and pasting temperatures), showed higher paste viscosities and produced more elastic gels (lower tan ? and higher G?). Starch granule size related positively with the proportion of amylopectin chains with DP < 12, paste viscosities and dynamic rheological moduli while negatively with non-starch components, gel tan ? and the proportion of amylopectin chains with DP > 12. Starches with greater proportion of amylopectin chains with DP > 12 showed higher gelatinization temperatures, while shorter chains (DP < 12), lipids and proteins contributed to reduced retrogradation tendencies (lower percent retrogradation). � 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.Item Structural and functional properties of amaranth starches from residue obtained during protein extraction(Springer, 2021-07-26T00:00:00) Shevkani, Khetan; Singh, Narpinder; Isono, Naoto; Noda, TakahiroThe present study evaluated Amaranthus caudatus (AC) and A. hypochondriacus (AH) starches obtained as coproduct during protein extraction for composition, granule size, amylopectin fine structure, thermal, retrogradation, pasting and dynamic rheological-properties to elucidate structure-function relationships. The starches exhibited unimodal particle size distribution with mean granule size of 1.26�3.12�?m. AC starch with larger granules (mean granule size 3.12�?m) than AH starches (1.26�1.59�?m) gelatinized at lower temperatures (lower DSC transition and pasting temperatures), showed higher paste viscosities and produced more elastic gels (lower tan ? and higher G?). Starch granule size related positively with the proportion of amylopectin chains with DP < 12, paste viscosities and dynamic rheological moduli while negatively with non-starch components, gel tan ? and the proportion of amylopectin chains with DP > 12. Starches with greater proportion of amylopectin chains with DP > 12 showed higher gelatinization temperatures, while shorter chains (DP < 12), lipids and proteins contributed to reduced retrogradation tendencies (lower percent retrogradation). � 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.Item Structural, Morphological, Thermal, and Pasting Properties of Starches From Diverse Indian Potato Cultivars(Wiley-VCH Verlag, 2018) Singh, Narpinder; Kaur, Amritpal; Shevkani, Khetan; Ezekiel, Rajrathnam; Kaur, Prabhjot; Isono,Naoto; Noda, TakahiroStarches from 42 diverse Indian potato cultivars are evaluated for diversity in structural (amylose content and amylopectin chain length distribution), morphological (granules size distribution), thermal, and pasting properties. Amylose content varied between 6.5 and 32.2% while the proportion of short (DP 6?12), medium (DP 13?18), and long (DP 19?30) amylopectin chains varied in the range from 37.2 to 45.4%, 35.6 to 39.1%, and 17.8 to 24.5%, respectively. Starches with higher transition temperature showed lower enthalpy of gelatinization. The proportion of small granules (<10 ?m) correlated negatively to short amylopectin chains (DP 6?12), peak viscosity, and breakdown viscosity. Transition and pasting temperature related negatively to the proportion of short and medium chains of amylopectin (DP 6?12 and 13?18, respectively), while positively to that of long chains (DP 19?30). Peak viscosity and breakdown viscosity has a negative relation while the final and setback viscosity have a positive relation with long amylopectin chains. ? 2017 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim