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Dry cultivation and cultivar affect starch synthesis and traits to define rice grain quality in various panicle parts.

Authors :
Chen, Zongkui
Li, Ping
Du, Yunfeng
Jiang, Yang
Cai, Mingli
Cao, Cougui
Source :
Carbohydrate Polymers. Oct2021, Vol. 269, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

A pot experiment was conducted to explore the effects of high-quality (Huanghuazhan, HH), drought-resistant (IR, IRAT109) and drought-susceptible cultivars (ZS, Zhenshan97) under flooding irrigation and dry cultivation (D) on the starch accumulation and synthesis, physicochemical traits of starch granules and rice grain quality at the upper (U) and lower panicle. Under D treatment, IR and ZS had lower rice quality, especially the appearance and cooking quality. DHH-U had the highest appearance, nutritional and cooking quality among all cultivars under D treatment, which could be ascribed to the synthesis of more short-branch chain amylopectin and correspondingly higher starch granule tightness. DHH-U also maintained ordered carbohydrate structure, crystalline regions, and many hydrophilic and hydrophobic functional groups in starch granules before pasting. It could prevent the polymerization of small molecules to avoid the formation of macromolecules after pasting. Overall, these findings may facilitate the improvement of grain quality in rice dry cultivation. • High-quality cultivar outperforms other cultivars in grain quality in dry cultivation. • Formation of short-branched chains of amyplopectin improves rice quality. • Rice dry cultivation leads to highly ordered and crystalline starch granules. • Hydrophilic and hydrophobic functional groups affect rice quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01448617
Volume :
269
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Carbohydrate Polymers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
151469499
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.carbpol.2021.118336