From ancient to old and modern durum wheat varieties: interaction among cultivar traits, management, and technological quality.

bread quality breeding emmer gluten pasta quality protein

Journal

Journal of the science of food and agriculture
ISSN: 1097-0010
Titre abrégé: J Sci Food Agric
Pays: England
ID NLM: 0376334

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
30 Mar 2019
Historique:
received: 03 06 2018
revised: 06 08 2018
accepted: 23 09 2018
pubmed: 30 9 2018
medline: 14 3 2019
entrez: 30 9 2018
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Following the boom in durum wheat breeding, ancient wheat disappeared from the human diet and old durum wheat varieties were replaced by what is believed to be their better versions: higher yielding modern varieties grown in high-input systems. Breeders have worked intensely ever since to improve the quality of durum wheat traits - mainly gluten subunit alleles - to obtain superior technological quality in the main durum wheat end products (first pasta and then bread) but conflicts about predicting their quality still exist. This is because quality is neither governed by one trait alone nor conditioned by a single controllable factor. This review discusses the evolution of wheat varieties from ancient to old, and then modern durum wheat in terms of agronomy, genetics, technological, and end-product qualities. Environmental effects will not be discussed. Moving from ancient to modern durum wheat varieties, grain yield increased, grain protein concentration decreased, and gluten strength and dough toughness improved, ameliorating the quality of pasta but decreasing the durum wheat versatility. © 2018 Society of Chemical Industry.

Identifiants

pubmed: 30267406
doi: 10.1002/jsfa.9388
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Review

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

2059-2067

Informations de copyright

© 2018 Society of Chemical Industry.

Auteurs

Marina Mefleh (M)

Dipartimento di Agraria, Sezione Agronomia, Coltivazioni erbacee e Genetica, Universita degli studi di Sassari, Sassari, Italy.

Paola Conte (P)

Dipartimento di Agraria, Sezione Scienze Ambientali Agrarie e Biotecnologie Agro-Alimentari, Universita degli studi di Sassari, Sassari, Italy.

Costantino Fadda (C)

Dipartimento di Agraria, Sezione Scienze Ambientali Agrarie e Biotecnologie Agro-Alimentari, Universita degli studi di Sassari, Sassari, Italy.

Francesco Giunta (F)

Dipartimento di Agraria, Sezione Agronomia, Coltivazioni erbacee e Genetica, Universita degli studi di Sassari, Sassari, Italy.

Antonio Piga (A)

Dipartimento di Agraria, Sezione Scienze Ambientali Agrarie e Biotecnologie Agro-Alimentari, Universita degli studi di Sassari, Sassari, Italy.

Georges Hassoun (G)

Faculty of Agronomy, Department of Environment, Lebanese University, Beirut, Lebanon.

Rosella Motzo (R)

Dipartimento di Agraria, Sezione Agronomia, Coltivazioni erbacee e Genetica, Universita degli studi di Sassari, Sassari, Italy.

Articles similaires

Triticum Transcription Factors Gene Expression Regulation, Plant Plant Proteins Salt Stress
Zea mays Triticum China Seasons Crops, Agricultural
Gene Editing Climate Change Africa South of the Sahara Crops, Agricultural Agriculture
Triticum Plant Transpiration Vapor Pressure Phenotype Genotype

Classifications MeSH