Abstract

Starch is the main source of dietary energy for humans. In order to understand the mechanisms governing native starch in vitro digestion, digestion data for six starches [wheat, maize, (waxy) maize, rice, potato and pea] of different botanical sources were fitted with the most common first-order kinetic models, i.e. the single, sequential, parallel and combined models. Parallel and combined models provided the most accurate fits and showed that all starches studied except potato starch followed a biphasic in vitro digestion pattern. The biological relevance of the kinetic parameters was explored by determining changes in crystallinity and molecular structure of the undigested starch residues during in vitro digestion. While the crystallinity of the undigested potato starch residues did not change substantially, a respectively small and large decrease in their amylose content and chain length during in vitro digestion was observed, indicating that amylose was digested slightly preferentially over amylopectin in native starch. However, the molecular structure of the starch residues changed too slowly and/or only to an insufficient extent to relate it to the kinetic parameters of the digested fractions predicted by the models. Such parameters thus need to be interpreted with caution, as their biological relevance still needs to be proven.

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