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Journal ArticleDOI

Individual contribution of grain outer layers and their cell wall structure to the mechanical properties of wheat bran.

TLDR
The mechanical properties of wheat bran and the contribution of each constitutive tissue on overall bran properties were determined on a hard wheat and a soft wheat, where whole bran, intermediate, and aleurone layers demonstrated elastoplastic behavior, whereas pericarp exhibited elastic behavior.
Abstract
The mechanical properties of wheat bran and the contribution of each constitutive tissue on overall bran properties were determined on a hard wheat (cv. Baroudeur) and a soft wheat (cv. Scipion). Manual dissection allowed three different layers to be separated from wheat bran, according to radial and longitudinal grain orientations, which were identified by confocal laser scanning microscopy as outer pericarp, an intermediate strip (comprising inner pericarp, testa, and nucellar tissue), and aleurone layer, respectively. Tissue microstructure and cell wall composition were determined. Submitted to traction tests, whole bran, intermediate, and aleurone layers demonstrated elastoplastic behavior, whereas pericarp exhibited elastic behavior. By longitudinal orientation, pericarp governed 50% bran elasticity (elastic strength and rigidity), whereas, in the opposite orientation, bran elastic properties were mostly influenced by the other tissues. Regardless of test orientation, the linear force required to bran rupture corresponded to the sum of intermediate and aleurone layer strengths. According to radial orientation, the intermediate strip governed bran extensibility, but according to longitudinal orientation, all tissues contributed until bran disruption. Tissues from both wheat cultivars behaved similarly. A structural model of wheat bran layers illustrated the detachment of pericarp from intermediate layer within radial bran strips.

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Bifidobacteria and butyrate-producing colon bacteria: Importance and strategies for their stimulation in the human gut

TL;DR: It has been shown that the butyrogenic effects of ITF and AXOS are the result of cross-feeding interactions between bifidobacteria and butyrate-producing colon bacteria, such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and Anaerostipes, Eubacterium, and Roseburia species (clostridial cluster XIVa).
Journal ArticleDOI

The contribution of wheat to human diet and health

TL;DR: Wheat shows high variability in the contents and compositions of beneficial components, with some (including dietary fiber) showing high heritability, so plant breeders should be able to select for enhanced health benefits in addition to increased crop yield.
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Cereal dietary fibre: a natural functional ingredient to deliver phenolic compounds into the gut

TL;DR: The hypothesis that the slow and continuous release in the gut of the dietary fibre bound antioxidants determines the health benefits of this cereal component is illustrated.
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Barley β-glucans and arabinoxylans: Molecular structure, physicochemical properties, and uses in food products–a Review

TL;DR: Barley β-glucans have been associated with lowering plasma cholesterol, reducing glycaemic index, and reducing risk of colon cancer as mentioned in this paper, and their potential application as food hydrocolloids has been also proposed based on their rheological characteristics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wheat arabinoxylans : Exploiting variation in amount and composition to develop enhanced varieties

TL;DR: This paper summarises recent knowledge on the structure and physicochemical properties of AX including variation between cultivars and tissues, methods for analysis and screening, biosynthetic mechanisms and approaches to identifying key genes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A simple and rapid preparation of alditol acetates for monosaccharide analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, a simple and rapid method for the preparation of alditol acetates from monosaccharides is described, which can be performed in a single tube without transfers or evaporations.
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New Insights Into the Molecular Architecture of Hardwood Lignins By Chemical Degradative Methods

TL;DR: In this article, a two-step degradation, thioacidolysis, provides detailed information on these network polymers, and the determination of the recovered thioethylated monomers provides an estimation of lignin units only involved in labile ether bonds.
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Isolation and structural determination of two 5,5'-diferuloyl oligosaccharides indicate that maize heteroxylans are covalently cross-linked by oxidatively coupled ferulates

TL;DR: In this paper, two dehydrodiferuloylated oligosaccharides (F8 and F9) were isolated from maize bran and their structure was determined using chromatography and LCMS and confirmed by 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy.
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The poly(phenolic) domain of potato suberin: a non-lignin cell wall bio-polymer

TL;DR: An H(2)O(2)-generating system with NAD(P)H-dependent oxidase-like properties that is temporally associated with the formation of potato suberin poly(phenolics) during suberization is described.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Chemical and Histological Study on the Effect of (1→4)-β-endo-xylanase Treatment on Wheat Bran

TL;DR: A purified thermostable (1→4)-β-endo-xylanase, solubilised 50% of the arabinoxylan in cell walls of wheat bran, and showed that the aleurone layer had been completely disorganised and was resistant to endoxylanase treatment.
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