Variability for Glutenins, Gluten Quality, Iron, Zinc and Phytic Acid in a Set of One Hundred and Fifty-Eight Common Wheat Landraces from Iran

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Author
Maryami, Zahra
Huertas-García, Ana Belen
Azimi, Mohammad Reza
Hernandez-Espinosa, Nayeli
Payne, Thomas
cer, Fausto
Govindan, Velu
Ibba, Maria Itria
Guzman, Carlos
Publisher
MDPIDate
2020Subject
bread wheat; landraces; gluten quality; glutenins; micronutrients; phytic acidMETS:
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Show full item recordAbstract
Bread wheat can be used to make di erent products thanks to the presence of gluten,
a protein network that confers unique visco-elastic properties to wheat doughs. Gluten is composed
by gliadins and glutenins. The glutenins can be further divided into high and low-molecular-weight
glutenins(HMWGsand LMWGs, respectively) and are encoded by Glu-1 and Glu-3 loci. The variability
of these genes is associated with di erences in quality. Because of this, the identification of novel
glutenin alleles is still an important target. In this study, 57 haplotypes or glutenin combinations
were registered among a set of 158 Iranian landraces and five novel HMWGs alleles were identified.
The landraces were also characterized for several quality traits, including gluten quality, which allowed
to associate the di erent glutenin alleles with low or high quality. Other quality traits examined
were iron, zinc, and phytate contents, which are intimately related with the nutritional quality.
Important variation for these components was found as well as for the phytate:iron/zinc molar ratios
(related to the potential bioavailability of these important micronutrients). The landraces identified in
the present study (some of them combining high gluten quality with low phytate:zinc values) could
be a useful resource for breeders who aim to improve the wheat end-use quality and especially the
content of zinc and its relative bioavailability.