Abstract

BackgroundStorage starch in starchy seed influences the seed weight and texture, and determines its applications in food and nonfood industries. Starch granules from different plant sources have significantly different shapes and sizes, and even more the difference exists in the different regions of the same tissue. Therefore, it is very important to in situ investigate the morphology and distribution of starch in the whole seed. However, a simple and rapid method is deficient to prepare the whole section of starchy seed for investigating the morphology and distribution of starch in the whole seeds for a large number of samples.ResultsA simple and rapid method was established to prepare the whole section of starchy seed, especially for floury seed, in this study. The whole seeds of translucent and chalky rice, vitreous and floury maize, and normal barley and wheat were sectioned successfully using the newly established method. The iodine-stained section clearly exhibited the shapes and size of starch granules in different regions of seed. The starch granules with different morphologies and iodine-staining colors existed regionally in the seeds of high-amylose rice and maize. The sections of lotus and kidney bean seeds also showed the feasibility of this method for starchy non-cereal seeds.ConclusionThe simple and rapid method was proven effective for preparing the whole sections of starchy seeds. The whole section of seed could be used to investigate the morphology and distribution of starch granules in different regions of the whole seed. The method was especially suitable for large sample numbers to investigate the starch morphology in short time.

Highlights

  • Storage starch in starchy seed influences the seed weight and texture, and determines its applications in food and nonfood industries

  • Storage starch is synthesized as discrete semicrystalline granules in amyloplast

  • Starch granules from different plant sources have significantly different shapes, sizes, and hilum positions [6]

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Summary

Introduction

Storage starch in starchy seed influences the seed weight and texture, and determines its applications in food and nonfood industries. Cereal starch is the major component of mature seeds, serves as the primary carbohydrate in the diets of humans and livestock, and has numerous important industrial applications [1]. Some legume seeds, such as kidney bean (Phaseolus vulgaris Linn.), have high starch content [2]. Starch granules from different plant sources have significantly different shapes, sizes, and hilum positions [6]. The starches from the different organs (such as seed and rhizome) [8] or tissues (such as endosperm and pericarp) of the same plant species have different granule morphologies [9].

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