Development of a high-throughput starch digestibility assay reveals wide variation among the A. E. Watkins wheat landrace collection
Zafeiriou, P.; Savva, G. M.; Ahn-Jarvis, J. H.; Warren, F. J.; Pasquariello, M.; Griffiths, S.; Seung, D.; Hazard, B. A.
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Breeding for less digestible starch in wheat can improve the health impact of bread and other wheat foods. Based on an established in vitro starch digestibility assay by Edwards et al. (2019) we developed a high-throughput assay to measure starch digestibility in hydrothermally processed samples for use in forward genetic approaches. Digestibility of purified starch from maize and wheat was measured using both methods and produced comparable results. Using the high-throughput assay, we estimated starch digestibility of 118 wheat landraces from the core Watkins collection and found wide variation across lines and elite UK varieties, (20% to 40% and 31% to 44% starch digested after 90 minutes respectively). Sieved flour fractions and purified starch for selected lines showed altered starch digestibility profiles compared with wholemeal flour, suggesting that matrix properties of flour rather than intrinsic properties of starch granules conferred the low starch digestibility observed.
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