Abstract

We report the isolation of a pure form of cell walls from wheat endosperm ‘popped’ out from the whole, enzyme deactivated and soaked grain, and compare them with cell walls isolated from milled flours of extraction rates from 45% to 75%, at physiological (37 °C) and elevated (70 °C) temperatures. Cell walls isolated from flours all contained non-endosperm walls whereas walls from popped endosperm were apparently pure. The monosaccharide composition of ‘popped’ cell walls was different to that of cell walls isolated from flour, particularly glucose and mannose contents (34 and 7% for ‘popped’ cf 29 and 3% for flour respectively) and arabinose to xylose ratios (0.45 for ‘popped’ cf 0.58 for flour). Total phenolic contents of popped endosperm cell walls were three to four times lower than for cell walls from flour. Elevated isolation temperature also had a solubilising effect, altering the cell wall composition. This study provides a novel method of isolating pure wheat endosperm cell walls, and demonstrates how contaminating (thick cell walled) non-endospermic material in milled flours can have a major influence on cell wall compositional analyses.

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