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1.
AFM studies have been made of the internal structure of pea starch granules. The data obtained provides support for the blocklet model of starch granule structure (Carbohydr. Polym. 32 (1997) 177-191). The granules consist of hard blocklets dispersed in a softer matrix material. High-resolution images have yielded new insights into the detailed structure of growth rings within the granules. The blocklet structure is continuous throughout the granule and the growth rings originate from localised defects in blocklet production distributed around the surface of spheroidal shells within the granules. A mutation at the rb locus did not lead to significant changes in granule architecture. However, a mutation at the r locus led to loss of growth rings and changed blocklet structure. For this mutant the blocklets were distributed within a harder matrix material. This novel composite arrangement was used to explain why the granules had internal fissures and also changes in gelatinisation behaviour. It is suggested that the matrix material is the amylose component of the granule and that both amylose and amylopectin are present within the r mutant starch granules in a partially-crystalline form. Intermediate changes in granule architecture have been observed for the double mutant rrb.  相似文献   

2.
A method has been developed for the in situ imaging of starch in dry seeds by exploiting the tight packing of the starch and protein storage reserves within the cells of the embryo. The method can be adapted to prepare seed samples which are suitable for light microscopy (birefringence and iodine staining), scanning electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy. Its potential for imaging the internal structure of starch granules without any prior isolation process is demonstrated for round smooth peas. Using a standard ultramicrotome, thin sections were cut directly from selected regions of dry pea seeds and examined by light microscopy before and after hydration. The sectioning procedure left a planed surface with the internal structure of the starch granules exposed. This material was examined by scanning electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy directly or after controlled hydration. In the hydrated pea samples, the growth ring structure and blocklet sub-structure of individual starch granules within the seed were visualised directly by atomic force microscopy. Furthermore, the effects of hydration and staining were monitored and have been used to introduce contrast into the images. The observations have revealed new information on the blocklet distribution within pea starch granules and the physical origins of the growth ring structure of the granules: the blocklet distribution suggests that the granules contain alternating bands with different levels of crystallinity, rather than alternating amorphous and crystalline growth rings.  相似文献   

3.
Molecular arrangement in blocklets and starch granule architecture   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The main hypotheses and the data regarding the starch granule structure and behaviour were gathered and considered comprehensively in this paper. The starch molecules such as amylopectin, amylose and intermediate materials, the non-starch molecules such as bound phosphates and lipids, and the crystal dimensions etc. their roles were demonstrated in the architectures of blocklet and granular ultrastructure. A normal blocklet is mainly constructed by the crystalline and amorphous lamellaes that are formed with the clusters of amylopectin molecule(s). The reducing terminal of the amylopectins in the blocklets may be toward an equal course. However, the defective blocklet production may be due to the participation of lower branching molecules such as amylose and intermediate materials. From the viewpoint of the physicochemical properties of the starch granules, the blocklet of two types may be arranged into the two formations, heterogeneous shell and homogenous shell. The amylopectin plays main role in blocklet architecture, while the other component is important in contributing to the strength and flexibility of starch granule.  相似文献   

4.
Internal structure of the starch granule revealed by AFM   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Atomic force microscopy images of sectioned native corn starch granules show evidence of the well-known radial organisation of the starch macromolecules, with the less-ordered hilum region near to the centre. Native granules show blocks 400-500 nm in size that span the growth rings. Lintnerised starch granules, where a mild acid hydrolysis has been used to remove the amorphous and less crystalline parts of the granule, clearly show smaller 'blocklets' within the rings approximately 10-30 nm in size. This level of organisation within the growth rings corresponds to the blocklet or superhelix structures that have been proposed in the literature for the association or clustering of amylopectin helices. Mechanical property imaging techniques have provided enhanced contrast to view this morphology, and shown the deformability of the starch structure under contact mode imaging conditions.  相似文献   

5.
Surface studies at ambient conditions of potato starch granules subjected to multiple freezing and thawing, performed by a high resolution non-contact atomic force microscopy (nc-AFM), revealed some details of the starch granule nanostructure. After the treatment, a significant separation and a chain-like organisation of the granule surface elements have been observed. An accurate analysis of the granule surface nanostructure with a single amylopectine cluster resolution could be carried out. The oblong nodules of approximately 20-50 nm in diameter have been observed at the surface of the potato starch granules. The same size particles were precipitated by ethanol from gelatinized potato starch suspensions. They were also detected at the surface of oat and wheat starch granules. After multiple freezing and thawing, the eroded potato granule surface revealed a lamellar structure of its interior. The 30-40 nm inter-lamellar distances were estimated by means of nc-AFM. These findings fit previously proposed dimensions of the structural elements in the crystalline region of the starch granule. The observed surface sub-particles might correspond to the single amylopectine side chain clusters bundled into larger blocklets packed in the lamellae within the starch granule. The results supported the blocklet model of the starch granule structure.  相似文献   

6.
Starch granule types from a variety of botanical sources were selected to represent differences in crystalline polymorph, amylose and phosphate content, and amylopectin chain length distribution. Equimolar labeling of starch molecules with the fluorophore 8-amino-1,3,6-pyrenetrisulfonic acid (APTS) was used to construct a detailed map of the distribution of amylose and amylopectin within the granule by confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) analysis. Medium- and high-resolution scanning electron microscopy (SEM) were used to provide detailed images of granule surface structures. By using a combined surface and internal imaging approach, interpretations of a number of previous structural observations is presented. In particular, internal images of high amylose maize and potato suggest that multiple initiations of new granules are responsible for the compound or elongated structures observed in these starches. CLSM optical sections of rice granules revealed an apparent altered distribution of amylose in relation to the proposed growth ring structure, hinting at a novel mechanism of starch molecule deposition. Well-described granule features, such as equatorial grooves, channels, cracks, and growth rings were documented and related to both the internal and external observations. A new method for probing the phosphate distribution in native granules was developed using a phosphate-binding fluorescent dye and CLSM.  相似文献   

7.
The influence of amylose on starch granule structure   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Starch granules are principally composed of the two glucose polymers amylose and amylopectin. Native starch granules typically contain around 20% amylose and 80% amylopectin. However, it is possible to breed plants that produce starch with very different amylose and amylopectin contents. At present, the precise structural roles played by these two polymers are incompletely understood. In this study, small-angle X-ray scattering techniques have been applied to investigate the effect of varying amylose content on the internal structure of maize, barley and pea starch species. The results suggest that amylose disrupts the structural order within the amylopectin crystallites.  相似文献   

8.
Iodine has been used as an effective tool for studying both the structure and composition of dispersed starch and starch granules. In addition to being employed to assess relative amylose contents for starch samples, it has been used to look at the molecular mobility of the glucose polymers within intact starch granules based on exposure to iodine vapor equilibrated at different water activities. Starches of different botanical origin including corn, high amylose corn, waxy corn, potato, waxy potato, tapioca, wheat, rice, waxy rice, chick pea and mung bean were equilibrated to 0.33, 0.75, 0.97 water activities, exposed to iodine vapor and then absorbance spectra and LAB color were determined. In addition, a new iodine quantification method sensitive to <0.1% iodine (w/w) was employed to measure bound iodine within intact granular starch. Amylose content, particle size distribution of granules, and the density of the starch were also determined to explore whether high levels of long linear glucose chains and the surface area-to-volume ratio were important factors relating to the granular iodine binding. Results showed, in all cases, starches complexed more iodine as water content increased and waxy starches bound less iodine than their normal starch counterparts. However, much more bound iodine could be measured chemically with waxy starches than was expected based on colorimetric determination. Surface area appeared to be a factor as smaller rice and waxy rice starch granules complexed more iodine, while the larger potato and waxy potato granules complexed less than would be expected based on measured amylose contents. Corn, high amylose corn, and wheat, known to have starch granules with extensive surface pores, bound higher levels of iodine suggesting pores and channels may be an important factor giving iodine vapor greater access to bind within the granules. Exposing iodine vapor to moisture-equilibrated native starches is an effective tool to explore starch granule architecture.  相似文献   

9.
Mutants of Pisum sativum L. with seeds containing low-amylose starch were isolated by screening a population derived from chemically mutagenized material. In all of the mutant lines selected, the low-amylose phenotype was caused by a recessive mutation at a single locus designated lam. In embryos of all but one mutant line, the 59 kDa granule-bound starch synthase (GBSSI) was absent or greatly reduced in amount. The granule-bound starch synthase activity in developing embryos of the mutants was reduced but not eliminated. These results provide further evidence that amylose synthesis is unique to GBSSI. Other granule-bound isoforms of starch synthase cannot substitute for this protein in amylose synthesis. Examination of iodine-stained starch granules from mutant embryos by light microscopy revealed large, blue-staining cores surrounded by a pale-staining periphery. In this respect, the low-amylose mutants of pea differ from those of other species. The differential staining may indicate that the structure of amylopectin varies between the core and peripheral regions.  相似文献   

10.
Certain combined characteristics of cellular structure and starch properties provide distinctions between varieties of potatoes and bear strong relation to their culinary qualities. Larger tissue cells and larger average starch granules are associated with mealiness. Smaller cells and starch granules characterize the less mealy and “waxy” varieties. Similarly, the same general relationships hold for the varietal characteristics of high vs. low solids and high vs. low starch contents. Within a variety, proportionately larger numbers of large starch granules are associated with tubers of high specific gravity, and more smaller granules, with low specific gravity. There also is a distinct reduction in percent of small granules during storage of tubers. Differences in starch granule size are accompanied by differences in amylose and amylopectin. Small granules contain less amylose and gel at higher temperatures than do the larger starch granules. Amylose content likewise appears to be a varietal characteristic. These variations in amylose content reflect fundamental differences in the properties of the starch gels formed when different varieties of potatoes are cooked. Likewise, there are similar distinctions between the starches within different tissue zones of individual tubers. Cell size also varies characteristically within different tuber regions. Starch gel properties may be manipulated during processing by such treatments as precooking-heating, chilling, freezing, and thawing. These treatments provide some measure of control of textural quality in the finished product. Additives such as stearates or glycerides complex readily with amylose and also influence gel properties and texture in processed potato products. Sucrose accumulated during tuber storage also may increase gel strength and influence texture. Varietal differences in cell structure and in starch granule size and composition offer opportunities for genetic exploitation. The merits of special processing for texture control vs. development of varieties for specific processed product qualities are briefly discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The application of atomic force microscopy (AFM) for observing iodine complexes in starch has been limited due to limitations including granular sample fixation techniques and possible unintended reactions with embedding materials such as epoxy resins or adhesives. In this paper, a new method is described that employs an optical microscopic technique to ensure that the tip of the AFM is scanning a specified granule without any probe-induced particle movement by the AFM probe motion. The direct sprinkling of samples on a two-sided adhesive tape allows investigations in an in situ environment of the un-embedded starch granule surface and thus provides high-resolution images of granule morphology and phase changes of starches in the presence of humidity and with iodine vapor. These observations demonstrate that this novel in situ AFM imaging technique allows us to visualize the hair-like structures on the surface of granular starches when starches are exposed to iodine vapor under humid environments. This study reveals that the hair-like extensions on the starch granule surfaces are strongly dependent on the organization of the glucan polymers within corn or potato starch.  相似文献   

12.

Background

Native starch accumulates as granules containing two glucose polymers: amylose and amylopectin. Phosphate (0.2–0.5%) and proteins (0.1–0.7%) are also present in some starches. Phosphate groups play a major role in starch metabolism while granule-bound starch synthase 1 (GBSS1) which represents up to 95% of the proteins bound to the granule is responsible for amylose biosynthesis.

Methods

Synchrotron micro-X-ray fluorescence (μXRF) was used for the first time for high-resolution mapping of GBSS1 and phosphate groups based on the XRF signal of sulfur (S) and phosphorus (P), respectively. Wild-type starches were studied as well as their related mutants lacking GBSS1 or starch-phosphorylating enzyme.

Results

Wild-type potato and maize starch exhibited high level of phosphorylation and high content of sulfur respectively when compared to mutant potato starch lacking glucan water dikinase (GWD) and mutant maize starch lacking GBSS1. Phosphate groups are mostly present at the periphery of wild-type potato starch granules, and spread all over the granule in the amylose-free mutant. P and S XRF were also measured within single small starch granules from Arabidopsis or Chlamydomonas not exceeding 3–5 μm in diameter.

Conclusions

Imaging GBSS1 (by S mapping) in potato starch sections showed that the antisense technique suppresses the expression of GBSS1 during biosynthesis. P mapping confirmed that amylose is mostly present in the center of the granule, which had been suggested before.

General significance

μXRF is a potentially powerful technique to analyze the minor constituents of starch and understand starch structure/properties or biosynthesis by the use of selected genetic backgrounds.  相似文献   

13.
The objective of this study was to determine the moisture content at which the segmental mobility of polymers within a starch granule is restricted. Common corn, waxy corn and high amylose corn starch samples were equilibrated to a final water activity of 0.15, 0.33, 0.75 or 0.97. The samples were then exposed to iodine vapor for 24 h and the color, absorption spectra and X-ray diffraction patterns were measured. Stained and unstained granules were also viewed under a bright field and polarized light microscope. The results demonstrate that successive local transitions occur within a granule with increasing moisture contents. Furthermore, the data shows that at moisture contents of about 13%, iodine is able to penetrate the granule and the resulting complex disrupts the crystalline arrangement within the granules. The differences in extent of mobility of polymers between different starch types can potentially illuminate differences in starch structure and architecture.  相似文献   

14.
The molecular deposition of starch extracted from normal plants and transgenically modified potato lines was investigated using a combination of light microscopy, environmental scanning electron microscopy (ESEM) and confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). ESEM permitted the detailed (10 nm) topographical analysis of starch granules in their hydrated state. CLSM could reveal internal molar deposition patterns of starch molecules. This was achieved by equimolar labelling of each starch molecule using the aminofluorophore 8-amino-1,3,6-pyrenetrisulfonic acid (APTS). Starch extracted from tubers with low amylose contents (suppressed granule bound starch synthase, GBSS) showed very little APTS fluorescence and starch granules with low molecular weight amylopectin and/or high amylose contents showed high fluorescence. Growth ring structures were sharper in granules with normal or high amylose contents. High amylose granules showed a relatively even distribution in fluorescence while normal and low amylose granules had an intense fluorescence in the hilum indicating a high concentration of amylose in the centre of the granule. Antisense of the starch phosphorylating enzyme (GWD) resulted in low molecular weight amylopectin and small fissures in the granules. Starch granules with suppressed starch branching enzyme (SBE) had severe cracks and rough surfaces. Relationships between starch molecular structure, nano-scale crystalline arrangements and topographical-morphological features were estimated and discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The degradation of pea starch granules by acid hydrolysis has been investigated using a range of chemical and structural methods, namely through measuring changes in amylose content by both the iodine binding and concanavalin A precipitation methods, along with small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), wide angle X-ray diffraction (XRD) and field emission scanning electron microscopy (FE-SEM). The relative crystallinity, intensity of the lamellar peak and the low-q scattering increased during the initial stages of acid hydrolysis, indicating early degradation of the amorphous regions (growth rings and lamellae). In the first 2 days of hydrolysis, there was a rapid decline in amylose content, a concomitant loss of precipitability of amylopectin by concanavalin A, and damage to the surface and internal granular structures was evident. These observations are consistent with both amylose and amylopectin being located on the surface of the granules and attacked simultaneously in the early stages of acid hydrolysis. The results are also consistent with amylose being more concentrated at the core of the granules. More extensive hydrolysis resulted in the simultaneous disruption of amorphous and crystalline regions, which was indicated by a decrease in lamellar peak intensity, decrease in interhelix peak intensity and no further increase in crystallinity. These results provide new insights into the organization of starch granules.  相似文献   

16.
The principle of using a chemically synthesized, well-defined branched oligosaccharide to provide a more detailed knowledge of the substrate specificity of starch synthase II (SSII) is demonstrated. The branched nonasaccharide, 6"'-alpha-maltotriosyl-maltohexaose, was investigated as a primer for particulate SSII using starch granules prepared from the low-amylose pea mutant lam as the enzyme source. The starch granule preparation from the lam pea mutant contains no starch synthases other than SSII and is devoid of alpha-amylase, beta-amylase and phosphorylase activity. SSII was demonstrated to catalyse a specific nonprocessive elongation of the nonreducing end of the shortest unit chain of 6"'-alpha-maltotriosyl-maltohexaose, i.e. the maltotriose chain. Maltotriose and maltohexaose, representing the two linear building units of the branched nonasaccharide, were also tested as primers for SSII. Maltotriose was elongated more efficiently than 6"'-alpha-maltotriosyl-maltohexaose and maltohexaose was used less efficiently. Compared to the surface exposed alpha-glucan chains of the granule bound amylopectin molecules, all three soluble oligosaccharides tested were poor primers for SSII. This indicates that in vivo, the soluble oligosaccharides supposedly released as result of amylopectin trimming reactions are not re-introduced into starch biosynthetic reactions via the action of the granule bound fraction of SSII.  相似文献   

17.
Progress in understanding the biosynthesis of amylose   总被引:19,自引:0,他引:19  
The storage of glucose in insoluble granules is a distinctive feature of plant cells. Biosynthesis of amylose, the minor low molecular mass fraction of starch occurs from ADP-glucose. This takes place within the polysaccharide matrix through the action of granule-bound starch synthase, the major protein associated with the granule. Recently, amylose has been successfully synthesized in vitro from purified granules. Two models have been proposed to explain the mechanism of amylose synthesis in plants. The first calls for priming of synthesis through small-size malto-oligosaccharides. The second suggests that glucans are extended by granule-bound starch synthase from a high molecular mass primer present within the granule. This extension is terminated through cleavage to produce amylose. This process is subsequently repeated to give several rounds of amylose synthesis.  相似文献   

18.
Starch granules from maize (Zea mays) contain a characteristic group of polypeptides that are tightly associated with the starch matrix (C. Mu-Forster, R. Huang, J.R. Powers, R.W. Harriman, M. Knight, G.W. Singletary, P.L. Keeling, B.P. Wasserman [1996] Plant Physiol 111: 821–829). Zeins comprise about 50% of the granule-associated proteins, and in this study their spatial distribution within the starch granule was determined. Proteolysis of starch granules at subgelatinization temperatures using the thermophilic protease thermolysin led to selective removal of the zeins, whereas granule-associated proteins of 32 kD or above, including the waxy protein, starch synthase I, and starch-branching enzyme IIb, remained refractory to proteolysis. Granule-associated proteins from maize are therefore composed of two distinct classes, the surface-localized zeins of 10 to 27 kD and the granule-intrinsic proteins of 32 kD or higher. The origin of surface-localized δ-zein was probed by comparing δ-zein levels of starch granules obtained from homogenized whole endosperm with granules isolated from amyloplasts. Starch granules from amyloplasts contained markedly lower levels of δ-zein relative to granules prepared from whole endosperm, thus indicating that δ-zein adheres to granule surfaces after disruption of the amyloplast envelope. Cross-linking experiments show that the zeins are deposited on the granule surface as aggregates. In contrast, the granule-intrinsic proteins are prone to covalent modification, but do not form intermolecular cross-links. We conclude that individual granule intrinsic proteins exist as monomers and are not deposited in the form of multimeric clusters within the starch matrix.It has long been known that starch granules contain bound polypeptides, with protein levels of isolated starch granules from maize (Zea mays) ranging from 0.3 to 1.0% based upon measurement of N2 (May, 1987). A recent study by our laboratory demonstrates that isolated starch granules from maize contain several dozen strongly bound polypeptides (Mu-Forster et al., 1996). The granule-associated proteins include starch-biosynthetic enzymes such as the waxy protein, SSI, and SBEIIb. These polypeptides are not removed from intact starch granules by protease treatment or detergent washing; therefore, they are believed to bind to the starch and to become irreversibly entrapped within the starch matrix.Based upon staining intensities of polypeptides extracted from the starch granule (Mu-Forster et al., 1996), approximately one-half of the granule-associated proteins in maize consist of low-molecular-mass polypeptides ranging between 10 and 27 kD. These bands fall within the size range displayed by the zein storage proteins, however, the spatial distribution of these polypeptides within the starch granule is unknown. Zeins have been defined as alcohol-soluble proteins that occur principally in protein bodies of maize endosperm and that may or may not require reduction before extraction (Wilson, 1991). The association of zeins with starch granules during endosperm development would not be expected because zein genes do not contain transit peptides that would target these proteins through the amyloplast envelope into the amyloplast stroma.The objective of this study was to establish the topology of granule-associated zeins in starch granules from maize endosperm. To accomplish this, it was necessary to distinguish between surface-localized and internalized polypeptides. Our working hypothesis defines polypeptides localized at the starch granule surface as those that are susceptible to hydrolysis upon treatment of intact granules with exogenous proteases. Conversely, internal granule proteins are defined as those that (a) become susceptible to proteolysis only following thermal disruption of the starch matrix, and (b) resist extraction by 2% SDS at room temperatures (Denyer et al., 1993; Rahman et al., 1995; Mu-Forster et al., 1996).In this study we were able to distinguish between surface-localized and internalized granule-associated polypeptides in starch granules from maize endosperm by use of the thermophilic protease thermolysin. Thermolysin is well suited for this purpose because it is highly active at starch-gelatinization temperatures, and has also been shown to effectively hydrolyze hydrophobic proteins located at the surfaces of chloroplasts and other subcellular organelles (Cline et al., 1984; Xu and Chitnis, 1995). Upon extended incubation of intact starch granules with thermolysin at subgelatinization temperatures, we found that zeins were selectively removed from the starch granule surface. All other granule-associated polypeptides remained inaccessible to proteolytic attack or to extraction by 2% SDS, unless the starch matrix was first disrupted by gelatinization. Our results distinguish between the surface-localized and granule-intrinsic proteins of maize endosperm, and establish that zeins are localized at the starch-granule surface. In addition, cross-linking experiments were conducted to determine nearest-neighbor relationships among zein subunits localized at the granule surface and granule intrinsic polypeptides localized within the starch matrix.  相似文献   

19.
The aim of this work was to characterize starch synthesis, composition, and granule structure in Arabidopsis leaves. First, the potential role of starch-degrading enzymes during starch accumulation was investigated. To discover whether simultaneous synthesis and degradation of starch occurred during net accumulation, starch was labeled by supplying (14)CO(2) to intact, photosynthesizing plants. Release of this label from starch was monitored during a chase period in air, using different light intensities to vary the net rate of starch synthesis. No release of label was detected unless there was net degradation of starch during the chase. Similar experiments were performed on a mutant line (dbe1) that accumulates the soluble polysaccharide, phytoglycogen. Label was not released from phytoglycogen during the chase indicating that, even when in a soluble form, glucan is not appreciably degraded during accumulation. Second, the effect on starch composition of growth conditions and mutations causing starch accumulation was studied. An increase in starch content correlated with an increased amylose content of the starch and with an increase in the ratio of granule-bound starch synthase to soluble starch synthase activity. Third, the structural organization and morphology of Arabidopsis starch granules was studied. The starch granules were birefringent, indicating a radial organization of the polymers, and x-ray scatter analyses revealed that granules contained alternating crystalline and amorphous lamellae with a periodicity of 9 nm. Granules from the wild type and the high-starch mutant sex1 were flattened and discoid, whereas those of the high-starch mutant sex4 were larger and more rounded. These larger granules contained "growth rings" with a periodicity of 200 to 300 nm. We conclude that leaf starch is synthesized without appreciable turnover and comprises similar polymers and contains similar levels of molecular organization to storage starches, making Arabidopsis an excellent model system for studying granule biosynthesis.  相似文献   

20.
Amyloses with distinct molecular masses are found in the starch of pea embryos compared with the starch of pea leaves. In pea embryos, a granule-bound starch synthase protein (GBSSIa) is required for the synthesis of a significant portion of the amylose. However, this protein seems to be insignificant in the synthesis of amylose in pea leaves. cDNA clones encoding a second isoform of GBSSI, GBSSIb, have been isolated from pea leaves. Comparison of GBSSIa and GBSSIb activities shows them to have distinct properties. These differences have been confirmed by the expression of GBSSIa and GBSSIb in the amylose-free mutant of potato. GBSSIa and GBSSIb make distinct forms of amylose that differ in their molecular mass. These differences in product specificity, coupled with differences in the tissues in which GBSSIa and GBSSIb are most active, explain the distinct forms of amylose found in different tissues of pea. The shorter form of amylose formed by GBSSIa confers less susceptibility to the retrogradation of starch pastes than the amylose formed by GBSSIb. The product specificity of GBSSIa could provide beneficial attributes to starches for food and nonfood uses.  相似文献   

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