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Title: Unraveling the impact of starch granule-associated proteins on the emulsifying ability of quinoa starch granules at multiple scales. Author: Liu C, Ma R, Shen W, Tian Y. Journal: Food Chem; 2025 Jan 01; 462():140974. PubMed ID: 39197239. Abstract: Total starch granule-associated proteins (tGAP), including granule-channel (GCP) and granule-surface proteins (GSP), alter the physicochemical properties of starches. Quinoa starch (QS) acts as an effective emulsifier in Pickering emulsion. However, the correlation between the tGAP and the emulsifying capacity of QS at different scales remains unclear. Herein, GCP and tGAP were selectively removed from QS, namely QS-C and QS-A. Results indicated that the loss of tGAP increased the water permeability and hydrophilicity of the starch particles. Mesoscopically, removing tGAP decreased the diffusion rate and interfacial viscous modulus. Particularly, GSP had a more profound impact on the interfacial modulus than GCP. Microscopically and macroscopically, the loss of tGAP endowed QS with weakened emulsifying ability in terms of emulsions with larger droplet size and diminished rheological properties. Collectively, this work demonstrated that tGAP played an important role in the structural and interfacial properties of QS molecules and the stability of QS-stabilized emulsions.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]