Genotypic, grain morphological and locality variation in rice phytate content and phytase activity

Phytate complexes in whole grain rice are indigestible by human but can be broken down by endogenous phytase enzyme. The inherent phytate content and phytase activity could influence the nutritional quality of whole grain rice. This work aims to determine and identify their variability with genotype...

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Main Authors: Lee, H. H., Bong, C. F. J., Loh, S. P., Sarbini, S. R., Yiu, P. H.
Format: Article
Published: College of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, United Arab Emirates University 2014
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/37768/
https://www.ejfa.me/index.php/journal/article/view/556
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Institution: Universiti Putra Malaysia
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spelling my.upm.eprints.377682023-10-17T07:58:53Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/37768/ Genotypic, grain morphological and locality variation in rice phytate content and phytase activity Lee, H. H. Bong, C. F. J. Loh, S. P. Sarbini, S. R. Yiu, P. H. Phytate complexes in whole grain rice are indigestible by human but can be broken down by endogenous phytase enzyme. The inherent phytate content and phytase activity could influence the nutritional quality of whole grain rice. This work aims to determine and identify their variability with genotypes, growing areas and grain morphology. It was found that the whole rice grain was largely high in phytate content (18.20 to 32.36 g/kg) but low in phytase activity (4.77 to 102.65 U/kg), with significant variation among cultivars. Phytate content was marginally different between growing locations but, with no significant difference among their genotypes and grain morphology. This variation could be due to locality factors such as cropping and fertilization practices in the cultivation site. Meanwhile, phytase activity appeared to be determined by genotype, grain width and grain length-to-width ratio. A relatively high phytase activity could be selected from the whole grain rice based on rounded grain and in the genotypic category of L. These types of rice cultivars could reduce the inherent phytate level and improve the nutritional quality of the whole grain rice. College of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, United Arab Emirates University 2014 Article PeerReviewed Lee, H. H. and Bong, C. F. J. and Loh, S. P. and Sarbini, S. R. and Yiu, P. H. (2014) Genotypic, grain morphological and locality variation in rice phytate content and phytase activity. Emirates Journal of Food and Agriculture, 26 (10). pp. 844-852. ISSN 2079-052X; ESSN: 2079-0538 https://www.ejfa.me/index.php/journal/article/view/556 10.9755/ejfa.v26i10.18503
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
description Phytate complexes in whole grain rice are indigestible by human but can be broken down by endogenous phytase enzyme. The inherent phytate content and phytase activity could influence the nutritional quality of whole grain rice. This work aims to determine and identify their variability with genotypes, growing areas and grain morphology. It was found that the whole rice grain was largely high in phytate content (18.20 to 32.36 g/kg) but low in phytase activity (4.77 to 102.65 U/kg), with significant variation among cultivars. Phytate content was marginally different between growing locations but, with no significant difference among their genotypes and grain morphology. This variation could be due to locality factors such as cropping and fertilization practices in the cultivation site. Meanwhile, phytase activity appeared to be determined by genotype, grain width and grain length-to-width ratio. A relatively high phytase activity could be selected from the whole grain rice based on rounded grain and in the genotypic category of L. These types of rice cultivars could reduce the inherent phytate level and improve the nutritional quality of the whole grain rice.
format Article
author Lee, H. H.
Bong, C. F. J.
Loh, S. P.
Sarbini, S. R.
Yiu, P. H.
spellingShingle Lee, H. H.
Bong, C. F. J.
Loh, S. P.
Sarbini, S. R.
Yiu, P. H.
Genotypic, grain morphological and locality variation in rice phytate content and phytase activity
author_facet Lee, H. H.
Bong, C. F. J.
Loh, S. P.
Sarbini, S. R.
Yiu, P. H.
author_sort Lee, H. H.
title Genotypic, grain morphological and locality variation in rice phytate content and phytase activity
title_short Genotypic, grain morphological and locality variation in rice phytate content and phytase activity
title_full Genotypic, grain morphological and locality variation in rice phytate content and phytase activity
title_fullStr Genotypic, grain morphological and locality variation in rice phytate content and phytase activity
title_full_unstemmed Genotypic, grain morphological and locality variation in rice phytate content and phytase activity
title_sort genotypic, grain morphological and locality variation in rice phytate content and phytase activity
publisher College of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, United Arab Emirates University
publishDate 2014
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/37768/
https://www.ejfa.me/index.php/journal/article/view/556
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