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Starch: definition, structure, and classification

Starch is a polysaccharide formed by units of glucose and the storage form of carbohydrates in plants.Foods high in starch
It is synthesized by the most part of vegetable cells and stored especially in seeds, sucha as cereals and legumes, tubers such as potatoes, roots, such as those of carrots, and some fruits, sucha as green banana. With sucrose and lactose, it is one of the three most common dietary carbohydrates and, among the previous ones, is the main source of carbohydrates in the mediterranean diet pattern.

Contents

Chemical structure of starch

It is present into vegetable cells and contains two types of homopolysaccharides, amylose and amylopectin.

Classification

Depending on the different velocity and degree of hydrolysis by alpha-amylase, starch can be classified in three classes:

RS can in turn be classified in:

References

  1. Belitz .H.-D., Grosch W., Schieberle P. “Food Chemistry” 4th ed. Springer, 2009
  2. Bender D.A. “Benders’ Dictionary of Nutrition and Food Technology”. 8th Edition. Woodhead Publishing. Oxford, 2006
  3. Englyst H.N., Quigley M.E., Hudson G.J. Definition and measurement of dietary fibre. Eur J Clin Nutr 1995;49:S48-S62
  4. Osorio-Dıaz P., Bello-Perez L.A., Agama-Acevedo E., Vargas-Torres A., Tovar J., Paredes-Lopez O. In vitro digestibility and resistant starch content of some industrialized commercial beans (Phaseolus vulgaris L.). Food Chem 2002;78:333-337. doi:10.1016/S0308-8146(02)00117-6
  5. Stipanuk M.H., Caudill M.A. Biochemical, physiological, and molecular aspects of human nutrition. 3rd Edition. Elsevier health sciences, 2012
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