Amylose and amylopectin, two types of starch, may be present in all plant seeds and tubers. Starch is used by plants to store surplus glucose and, as a result, starch is also used as food by mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation at night or when photosynthesis is improbable.
Plants store surplus starch in amyloplasts, which are leucoplasts that predominantly store starch granules by polymerizing glucose and translating these reserves back into simpler sugars when light is insufficient (e.g., maltose and glucose).
Chloroplasts, pigmented organelles that are largely engaged in photosynthesis, may also store starch. Animals don’t really store excess glucose as starch; instead, they store it as glycogen. Certain animals, on the other hand, ingest meals that are high in starch. Many staple foods, including maize, rice, wheat, potatoes, cassava, barley, rye, taro, and yams, include dietary starch.
It may also be found in cereals, noodles, pancakes, bread, and pasta, among other foods. Per gramme of starch, there are around 4.2 kilocalories. Starch may be a key source of glucose in humans. Glucose is required for general metabolism, including glycolysis (energy production), glycogenesis (glycogen synthesis), and the pentose phosphate cycle (for pentoses and NADPH syntheses for use in nucleic acid synthesis and lipid synthesis, respectively).
Papermaking, as a food, for stiffening linen in laundries, in making a paste, in the printing industry, in hydrogen production, and so on are only a few of the commercial uses for starch.