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Protein and Quality Characterization of Triticale Translocation Lines in Breadmaking

November 2010 Volume 87 Number 6
Pages 546 — 552
Ramakanth S. Jonnala,1,2 Finlay MacRitchie,1 Thomas J. Herald,3 Domenico Lafiandra,4 Benedetta Margiotta,5 and Michael Tilley3

Kansas State University, Dept. of Grain Science and Industry, Manhattan, KS 66506. Corresponding author. Phone: +01 (405)-880-2684. E-mail: jsr369@gmail.com USDA-ARS, Center for Grain & Animal Health Research, Manhattan, KS 66502. Names are necessary to report factually on available data; however, the USDA neither guarantees nor warrants the standard of the product, and the use of the name by the USDA implies no approval of the product to the exclusion of others that may also be suitable. Dept. of Agrobiology and Agrochemistry, University of Tuscia, Viterbo, Italy. Institute of Plant Genetics, CNR, Bari, Italy.


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Accepted October 6, 2010.
ABSTRACT

Introduction of high molecular weight glutenin subunits (HMW-GS) from the Glu-D1d locus of wheat into triticale restores the genetic constitution of high molecular weight glutenin loci to that of wheat and subsequently improves the breadmaking quality of triticale. One means of achieving such restoration of the genetic constitution is through the use of translocation lines. The aim of this study was to evaluate and compare the performance of translocations 1A.1D and 1R.1D with HMW-GS 5+10 and 2+12 in terms of physical dough tests and baking quality using four different sets of triticale lines, GDS7, Trim, Rhino, and Rigel. In general, significantly lower milling quality (flour yield), very low mixing times with lower loaf volume were typical of all the triticales studied except 1A.1D 5+10 lines, when compared to hard wheat flour (Pegaso). Among the lines studied, significantly higher loaf volume, mixograph dough development time (MDDT), and maximum resistance to extension (Rmax) were observed with 1A.1D 5+10 lines indicating that translocation of the Glu-D1d allele with HMW-GS 5+10 was beneficial in terms of improving the quality attributes. Although pure triticale flour from these lines did not possess the functional characteristics for good quality bread, the translocation 1A.1D that contains HMW glutenin subunits 5+10 showed significant improvement in quality characteristics, and could reasonably be expected to yield commercially satisfactory bread loaves when combined with bread wheat flour. Significantly higher UPP, Rmax, and MDDT values along with a lower gliadin-to-glutenin ratio in 1A.1D 5+10 of GDS7 and Rigel sets indicate that the molecular weight distribution was shifted to higher molecular weights, resulting in greater dough strength associated with 5+10 subunits.



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