Starch is the primary carbohydrate reserve in plants. It's a polysaccharide composed of glucose units, existing in two forms:
Linear chain of glucose with α-1,4 linkages. Typically 20-30% of starch. Forms helical structures that bind iodine (blue color). Less soluble, forms gels .
Branched chain with α-1,4 linkages and α-1,6 branch points. Typically 70-80% of starch. Highly branched, more soluble, crystallizes differently .
Plants store starch in two types of plastids :
Starch is deposited in semi-crystalline granules whose size, shape, and structure vary by species and even variety—this affects functional properties in food processing .
Starch synthesis occurs in plastids through a pathway involving several key enzymes :
| Enzyme | Function | Regulation |
|---|---|---|
| ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase) | Converts glucose-1-phosphate + ATP to ADP-glucose (the activated sugar donor) | Activated by 3-PGA (high photosynthesis); inhibited by Pi. The key regulatory step! |
| Starch synthase | Adds glucose units from ADP-glucose to the growing chain (α-1,4 linkages) | Multiple isoforms; some bound to starch granule, some soluble |
| Branching enzyme | Creates α-1,6 branch points by cleaving and reattaching chain segments | Determines amylopectin structure |
| Debranching enzyme | Trims excess branches; helps shape the granule | Mutations cause "sugary" phenotypes (e.g., sweet corn) |
AGPase is the master regulator. In leaves, it's activated by 3-PGA (a product of photosynthesis) and inhibited by inorganic phosphate. This ensures starch is made when photosynthesis is active and sugar levels are high .
Sweet corn varieties carry mutations in enzymes of starch synthesis. The shrunken-2 (sh2) mutation affects AGPase, reducing starch synthesis and causing sugar accumulation. The sugary-1 (su1) mutation affects debranching enzyme, altering starch structure and increasing sugar content. These mutations give sweet corn its characteristic sweetness but also reduce germination and vigor .
Leaves exhibit a daily rhythm of starch metabolism :
Plants carefully regulate this cycle. The rate of starch degradation at night is precisely controlled so that reserves last until dawn. Mutants that degrade starch too quickly run out of sugars before morning and starve; those that degrade too slowly waste photosynthetic capacity .
Starch is broken down when plants need energy or carbon skeletons—during germination, sprouting, or at night in leaves. The pathway involves :
| Enzyme | Function | Location |
|---|---|---|
| α-amylase | Endo-amylase—cleaves internal α-1,4 bonds randomly, producing smaller dextrins | Secreted; major enzyme in germinating seeds |
| β-amylase | Exo-amylase—cleaves maltose units from non-reducing ends | Present in leaves; activated at night |
| Debranching enzyme | Cleaves α-1,6 branch points | Works with amylases for complete breakdown |
| Starch phosphorylase | Uses phosphate to release glucose-1-phosphate | Minor pathway in most plants |
In cereal seeds, starch degradation is hormonally controlled. Gibberellins produced by the embryo stimulate the aleurone layer to synthesize and secrete α-amylase, which breaks down endosperm starch to fuel seedling growth .
In brewing, barley is deliberately germinated (malted) to activate α-amylase. The malt is then dried and used to convert grain starches into fermentable sugars. Understanding and controlling amylase activity is crucial for the brewing industry .
When potatoes are stored at cold temperatures (below 10°C), a process called cold-induced sweetening occurs :
Industry impact: Cold-induced sweetening costs the potato processing industry millions annually. Breeders are developing varieties with reduced cold-induced sweetening by modifying starch synthesis and degradation enzymes .
| Enzyme | Role in cold-induced sweetening | Breeding target |
|---|---|---|
| Invertase | Converts sucrose to glucose + fructose | Reduce expression |
| Amylases | Break down starch to sugars | Reduce activity |
| UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase | Involved in sucrose synthesis | Maintain activity |
The amylose:amylopectin ratio profoundly affects food properties :
| Crop | Amylose:Amylopectin | Food properties |
|---|---|---|
| Waxy maize | 0:100 (pure amylopectin) | Clear gels, stable to freezing; used in puddings, sauces |
| Normal maize | 25:75 | General purpose |
| High-amylose maize | 70:30 | Firm gels, resistant starch (dietary fiber) |
| Potato | 20:80 | High swelling power, clear pastes |
| Rice | 0-30% amylose | Low amylose = sticky; high amylose = fluffy |
Enset is a starch-storage crop where the pseudostem and corm accumulate large amounts of starch. Traditional processing involves fermenting the starch to produce kocho. Understanding starch degradation during fermentation could help optimize product quality and safety .
Teff grain starch properties affect injera quality. The amylose content and starch granule size influence water absorption, fermentation, and texture of injera .
In the Ethiopian highlands, potatoes are often stored at ambient temperatures (15-20°C). However, sprouting occurs within weeks. Cold storage (4-8°C) would extend storage life but risks cold-induced sweetening—a trade-off that requires variety selection and careful management .
| Process | Location | Key enzymes | Regulation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Synthesis | Chloroplasts (transitory), amyloplasts (storage) | AGPase, starch synthase, branching enzyme | AGPase activated by 3-PGA, inhibited by Pi |
| Degradation | Leaves (night), germinating seeds, sprouting tubers | α-amylase, β-amylase, debranching enzyme | Gibberellins in seeds; circadian clock in leaves |
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