Perspectives to breed for improved baking quality wheat varieties adapted to organic growing conditions

Osman, Aart M.; Struik, Paul C.; van Bueren, Edith T. Lammerts

Abstract

Northwestern European consumers like their bread to be voluminous and easy to chew. These attributes require a raw material that is rich in protein with, among other characteristics, a suitable ratio between gliadins and glutenins. Achieving this is a challenge for organic growers, because they lack cultivars that can realise high protein concentrations under the relatively low and variable availability of nitrogen during the grain-filling phase common in organic farming. Relatively low protein content in wheat grains thus needs to be compensated by a high proportion of high-quality protein. Organic farming therefore needs cultivars with genes encoding for optimal levels of glutenins and gliadins, a maximum ability for nitrogen uptake, a large storage capacity of nitrogen in the biomass, an adequate balance between vegetative and reproductive growth, a high nitrogen translocation efficiency for the vegetative parts into the grains during grain filling and an efficient conversion of nitrogen into high-quality proteins. In this perspective paper the options to breed and grow such varieties are discussed. Copyright (C) 2011 Society of Chemical Industry

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000297951800002 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: JOURNAL OF THE SCIENCE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE
Volumen: 92
Número: 2
Editorial: Wiley
Fecha de publicación: 2012
Página de inicio: 207
Página final: 215
DOI:

10.1002/jsfa.4710

Notas: ISI