Effects of Degree of Polymerization on Size, Crystal
Structure, and Digestibility of Debranched Starch Nanoparticles and
Their Enhanced Antioxidant and Antibacterial Activities of Curcumin
posted on 2019-03-28, 00:00authored byYang Qin, Jinpeng Wang, Chao Qiu, Yao Hu, Xueming Xu, Zhengyu Jin
The versatility of
debranched starch nanoparticles (DBS-NPs) has
attracted considerable attention from the food, agricultural, and
cosmetic industries. The aim of this study was to investigate the
effect of DBSs with low (DP < 10), moderate (10 > DP < 20),
and high (20 > DP < 25) DPs (where DP represents the degree
of
polymerization), as well as reaction temperatures (25, 60, and 90
°C) on size, morphology, crystal structure, and digestibility
of the refined DBS-NPs via nanoprecipitation. Spherical DBS-NPs with
a controlled size of 40–200 nm were obtained; no nanoparticles
were observed when the average DP was <10. The relative crystallinity
increased from 11.1% to 71.6% as the increasing the average DP increased.
When the microsized DBSs were converted to nanoscale DBSs, the rapidly
digestible starch levels of the DBS-NPs decreased, and the DBS-NPs
showed remarkable increase in the sum of slowly digestible starch
and resistant starch contents, compared to the responding DBS. Furthermore,
the maximum encapsulation efficiency of curcumin in DBS-NPs reached
up to 92.49%. The antioxidant and antibacterial activities of curcumins
in DBS-NPs were enhanced significantly, and their antioxidant stability
was improved markedly when exposed to UV light or heat treatments.