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Endosperm enzyme activity is responsible for texture and eating quality of cooked rice grains in Japanese cultivars

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posted on 2018-11-21, 08:24 authored by Ken Iijima, Keitaro Suzuki, Kiyosumi Hori, Kaworu Ebana, Keiichi Kimura, Yoshimasa Tsujii, Katsumi Takano

Eating quality of cooked rice grains is an important determinant of its market price and consumer acceptance. To comprehensively assess the variation of eating-quality traits in 152 Japanese rice cultivars, we evaluated activities of eight endosperm enzymes related to degradation of starch and cell-wall polysaccharides. Endosperm enzyme activities showed a wide range of variations and were lower in recently developed cultivars than in landraces and old improved cultivars. Activities of most endosperm enzymes correlated significantly with the eating-quality score and surface texture of cooked rice grains. Principal component analysis revealed that rice cultivars with high eating-quality scores had high stickiness of the grain surface and low levels of endosperm enzyme activities. These results suggest that endosperm enzyme activities control texture and eating quality of cooked rice grains in Japanese rice cultivars.

Japanese rice cultivars with low endosperm enzyme activities showed high eating-quality scores and high stickiness of the surface of cooked grains.

Funding

This work was supported from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) in Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C) [Grant Number 16K07564].

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