Structural understanding of the degradation of glucose polymers. Understanding starch and glycogen breakdown at the molecular level is important for human nutrition and health. The understanding from this project will lead to new means for the control and mitigation of nutritional diseases, such as diabetes and obesity, as well as improved foods.
Establishing the relations between starch nano- and mesostructure and macroscopic physical properties. Starch is the major energy component within human diets, and the most abundant polymer that can be readily extracted from annual crop plants, leading to many actual and potential industrial applications. There are major opportunities to optimise the nutritional value of starches in the human diet, and to enhance the properties of extracted starches as renewable alternatives to petrochemical pol ....Establishing the relations between starch nano- and mesostructure and macroscopic physical properties. Starch is the major energy component within human diets, and the most abundant polymer that can be readily extracted from annual crop plants, leading to many actual and potential industrial applications. There are major opportunities to optimise the nutritional value of starches in the human diet, and to enhance the properties of extracted starches as renewable alternatives to petrochemical polymers. This project will open up our understanding of the structure of starch polymers and show how this relates to important properties such as enzyme digestibility rates, leading to new opportunities for public health and commercial benefits.Read moreRead less
Smells that 'taste': Flavour perception and its consequences. The experience of flavour during eating and drinking has surprising social and economic ramifications. Our preference for sweet and fatty food has contributed to progressive increases in body mass over the last twenty years. Many experts now consider this to be a major public health crisis in the making. Economically, Australia is heavily dependent upon food exports, both in terms of primary production and value added processed food ....Smells that 'taste': Flavour perception and its consequences. The experience of flavour during eating and drinking has surprising social and economic ramifications. Our preference for sweet and fatty food has contributed to progressive increases in body mass over the last twenty years. Many experts now consider this to be a major public health crisis in the making. Economically, Australia is heavily dependent upon food exports, both in terms of primary production and value added processed food. Understanding the psychology of flavour, which is central to this project, should assist the development of non-fattening additives that appreciably alter fat and sweetness perception, creating new food products that are healthy, preferred and potential export earners. Read moreRead less