Abstract

A commercial enzyme preparation from a selected strain of Penicillium funiculosum has been partially purified using a single stage chromatofocusing fractionation to produce an amylase-free mixture of hydrolytic enzymes. This mixture has been used to remove the non-starch polysaccharides from aqueous extracts of laboratory milled barley. The structure of the resulting purified α-glucan fraction has been examined by gel filtration before and after enzymic debranching and by iodine staining. The mild damage caused to the starch within the barley kernel releases a low molecular weight amylopectin molecule with no detectable amylose in the product. In this respect the product is different from that produced after severe, direct grinding of the purified barley starch where some amylose appears in the water soluble extract. Although the small amount of α-glucan is not of any quantitative industrial significance in itself, it does reflect the extent and type of physical damage which is taking place in the starch granule. The model proposed to explain these results - a starch granule with a solid amylose/amylopectin core but with a number of patches of protruding amylopectin clusters - may have important implications in an industrial context.

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