The sedentary lifestyle and refined food consumption significantly lead to obesity, type 2 diabetes, and related complications, which have become one of the major threats to global health. This incidence could be potentially reduced by daily foods rich in resistant starch (RS). However, it remains a challenge to breed high-RS rice varieties. Here, we reported a high-RS mutant
rs4
with an RS content of ~10.8% in cooked rice. The genetic study revealed that the loss-of-function
SSIIIb
and
SSIIIa
together with a strong
Wx
allele in the background collaboratively contributed to the high-RS phenotype of the
rs4
mutant. The increased RS contents in
ssIIIa
and
ssIIIa ssIIIb
mutants were associated with the increased amylose and lipid contents. SSIIIb and SSIIIa proteins were functionally redundant, whereas
SSIIIb
mainly functioned in leaves and
SSIIIa
largely in endosperm owing to their divergent tissue-specific expression patterns. Furthermore, we found that
SSIII
experienced duplication in different cereals, of which one
SSIII
paralog was mainly expressed in leaves and another in the endosperm.
SSII
but not
SSIV
showed a similar evolutionary pattern to
SSIII
. The copies of endosperm-expressed
SSIII
and
SSII
were associated with high total starch contents and low RS levels in the seeds of tested cereals, compared with low starch contents and high RS levels in tested dicots. These results provided critical genetic resources for breeding high-RS rice cultivars, and the evolutionary features of these genes may facilitate to generate high-RS varieties in different cereals.
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