Molecular Weight Distribution of Whole Starch in Rice Endosperm by Gel-permeation Chromatography

J Appl Glycosci (1999). 2023 Mar 3;70(1):25-32. doi: 10.5458/jag.jag.JAG-2022_0010. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Starch is comprised of very large α-glucan molecules composed primarily of linear amylose and highly branched amylopectin. Most methods for analyses of starch structure use hydrolytic enzymes to cleave starch. When undegraded, whole starch structures can be analyzed by gel-permeation chromatography (GPC), but this typically yields a single peak each for amylopectin and amylose. The objective of this study was to stably separate amylopectins in whole starch based on their molecular weight using GPC, and to determine the structure of each peak. When alkali-gelatinized whole starch was applied to GPC columns (Toyopearl HW75S × 2, HW65S, and HW55S), it was separated into three peaks. Iodine staining and chain length distribution analyses of debranched samples showed that peaks were mainly composed of high-molecular weight (MW) amylopectin consisting of many clusters, low-MW amylopectin consisting of a small number of clusters, and amylose.

Keywords: amylopectin cluster; amylose; chain length distribution; gel-permeation chromatography; rice endosperm; starch structure.