Author:
Panozzo J. F.,Eagles H. A.
Abstract
Glutenins and gliadins are the major components of the storage protein in
wheat and make a significant contribution to dough rheology and baking
quality. Qualitative differences in these proteins are known to be important
for dough rheology, particularly for glutenins, but much less is known about
quantitative differences, especially as influenced by field environment.
Flour protein, the proportion of glutenin and gliadin in flour protein, loaf
volume, and the dough rheological characters dough development time, dough
breakdown, dough extensibility, and maximum dough resistance (Rmax) were
determined for 7 cultivars grown in 15 diverse environments. The proportion of
glutenin in flour protein was highly dependent on cultivar, whereas, although
cultivar was still important, environmental variation was greater than
cultivar variation for gliadin. Environmental variation was greater than
cultivar variation for the dough rheological characters. Across environments,
the proportion of gliadin increased with increasing flour protein, whereas the
proportion of glutenin decreased. An index of accumulated temperatures above
30˚C during the first 14 days after anthesis explained a significant
proportion of the increase in gliadin, and, to a lesser extent, the decrease
in glutenin. Increasing Rmax and dough development time, and more rapid dough
breakdown, were also associated with this index. The rate of increase of Rmax
with the temperature index was greater for cultivars with the
Glu-D1a allele than those with the
Glu-D1d allele, suggesting that the relative performance
of cultivars with different alleles at this locus depends on environment.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
111 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献