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Publication no. C-2003-1110-06R
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ARTICLE
Increase in Apparent Amylose Content and Change in Starch Pasting Properties
at Cool Growth Temperatures in Mutant Wheat.
T. Yanagisawa (1,2), C.
Kiribuchi-Otobe (1), and M. Fujita (1). (1) National Institute of Crop Science
(NICS), 2-1-18 Kannondai, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8518, Japan. (2) Present address
of corresponding author: National Agricultural Research Center for Western
Region (WeNarc); 1-3-1 Senyu, Zentsuji, Kagawa 765-8508, Japan. Fax:
+81-877-63-1683. E-mail: <tyanagi@affrc.go.jp> Cereal Chem. 81(1):26-30. Accepted
March 31, 2003. Copyright 2004 American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc.
Some mutant wheat lines with low-amylose content were grown in a field and
greenhouse (15 or 20°C) to compare apparent amylose content and starch pasting
properties. The apparent amylose content of flour and starch increased and
starch pasting parameters as measured by a Rapid Visco Analyser (RVA) changed in
the greenhouse (at cool temperatures) during seed maturation. Densitometric
analysis of the protein band separated by electrophoresis suggested that the
increase in amylose content by cool temperature was related to the amount of
Wx-D1 protein. This data suggests that the Wx-D1 gene was responsible for
these changes. In wheat starch from Tanikei A6099 and Tanikei A6598 at 15°C,
the value of final viscosity and total setback was higher than that from the
field. In wheat starch from Tanikei A6599-4 (waxy mutant with stable hot paste
viscosity), the peak viscosity temperature was higher and time maintained
>80% of the peak was shorter at 15°C than that from the field. Genetic
analysis using doubled-haploid (DH) lines from a combination of Tanikei A6599-4
and Kanto 118 (low-amylose line) showed that apparent amylose content increased
and the starch pasting curve and properties changed in waxy progenies similar to
Tanikei A6599-4.
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