Abstract
Designing starch with tailored digestibility and stability remains a challenge, as achieving multi-faceted structural modifications typically requires complex multi-enzyme processes. To address this, we report on a recombinant maltotriosyl transferase (MTase) from Aeribacillus pallidus , efficiently expressed in a food-grade host and exhibited robust catalytic activity. This enzyme serves as a dual-specificity biocatalyst, uniquely enabling the concurrent introduction of both α-1,3 (17%) and α-1,6 (33%) glycosidic linkages into waxy corn starch in a single, streamlined step. This catalytic action triggered a profound multi-scale structural transformation, leading to a short-chain, hyper-branched polymer (DP ≤13 increased to 76.9%), a marked reduction in molecular weight, and the reassembly of fragments into a dense lamellar network as visualized by cryo-SEM. These changes synergistically enhanced functional properties: the contents of slowly digestible starch (SDS) and resistant starch (RS) increased by approximately 129% and 54%, respectively, while the modified starch also achieved high cold-water solubility (90.01%) and exceptional freeze-thaw stability (water release <20% after 25 cycles). This study establishes a direct correlation between the engineered hybrid-branched (α-1,3/α-1,6), short-chain architecture and the concurrent improvement in nutritional and physicochemical properties of starch.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 125384 |
| Journal | Carbohydrate Polymers |
| Volume | 385 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 1 Aug 2026 |
Keywords
- Branching density
- Freeze-thaw stability
- Glycosyltransferase
- Slowly digestible starch
- Starch modification
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