January
2011
Volume
88
Number
1
Pages
72
—
79
Authors
Lilian U. Thompson,1,2
Clodualdo C. Maningat,3
Kyungsoo Woo,3 and
Paul A. Seib4
Affiliations
Dept. of Nutritional Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Corresponding author. Phone: 416-978-3523. Fax: 416-978-5882. E-mail: lilian.thompson@utoronto.ca
MGP Ingredients, Inc., Atchison, KS 66002.
Dept. Grain Science and Industry, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506.
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RelatedArticle
Accepted November 23, 2010.
Abstract
ABSTRACT
RS4-type resistant wheat starch (RWS) and resistant potato starch (RPS) were subjected successively to in vitro digestion with pepsin and pancreatin-bile, and the indigestible residues (82.1% db and 74.1% db, respectively) were recovered and subsequently fermented by in vitro techniques using fresh human fecal microbiota as inoculum. Scanning electron microscopy of the indigestible residues showed surface erosion on the residual granules. Total gas production during the in vitro fermentation increased almost linearly over time with the two resistant starches exhibiting similar gas production rates, as well as a similar rate of production of total short-chain fatty acids (SCFA). The indigestible fractions from both starches produced acetate as the major SCFA and relatively higher levels of butyrate than propionate, but wheat starch tended to produce more butyrate over time than potato starch. Fractional molar ratios of acetate, propionate, and butyrate from the RWS and RPS were 0.586:0.186:0.228 and 0.577:0.200:0.223, respectively. The calculated caloric contributions of the RWS and RPS are ≈33% lower than for unmodified starch and are comparable to those reported in the literature for RS2 and RS3 high-amylose maize starches.
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