Cargando…

Mutant Lines of Spring Wheat with Increased Iron, Zinc, and Micronutrients in Grains and Enhanced Bioavailability for Human Health

Deficiency of metals, primarily Fe and Zn, affects over half of the world's population. Human diets dominated by cereal products cause micronutrient malnutrition, which is common in many developing countries where populations depend heavily on staple grain crops such as wheat, maize, and rice....

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kenzhebayeva, Saule, Abekova, Alfia, Atabayeva, Saule, Yernazarova, Gulzira, Omirbekova, Nargul, Zhang, Guoping, Turasheva, Svetlana, Asrandina, Saltanat, Sarsu, Fatma, Wang, Yarong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6437721/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31001559
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/9692053
_version_ 1783406979969974272
author Kenzhebayeva, Saule
Abekova, Alfia
Atabayeva, Saule
Yernazarova, Gulzira
Omirbekova, Nargul
Zhang, Guoping
Turasheva, Svetlana
Asrandina, Saltanat
Sarsu, Fatma
Wang, Yarong
author_facet Kenzhebayeva, Saule
Abekova, Alfia
Atabayeva, Saule
Yernazarova, Gulzira
Omirbekova, Nargul
Zhang, Guoping
Turasheva, Svetlana
Asrandina, Saltanat
Sarsu, Fatma
Wang, Yarong
author_sort Kenzhebayeva, Saule
collection PubMed
description Deficiency of metals, primarily Fe and Zn, affects over half of the world's population. Human diets dominated by cereal products cause micronutrient malnutrition, which is common in many developing countries where populations depend heavily on staple grain crops such as wheat, maize, and rice. Biofortification is one of the most effective approaches to alleviate malnutrition. Genetically stable mutant spring wheat lines (M(7) generation) produced via 100 or 200 Gy gamma treatments to broaden genetic variation for grain nutrients were analyzed for nutritionally important minerals (Ca, Fe, and Zn), their bioavailability, and grain protein content (GPC). Variation was 172.3–883.0 mg/kg for Ca, 40.9–89.0 mg/kg for Fe, and 22.2–89.6 mg/kg for Zn. In mutant lines, among the investigated minerals, the highest increases in concentrations were observed in Fe, Zn, and Ca when compared to the parental cultivar Zhenis. Some mutant lines, mostly in the 100 Gy-derived germplasm, had more than two-fold higher Fe, Zn, and Ca concentrations, lower phytic acid concentration (1.4–2.1-fold), and 6.5–7% higher grain protein content compared to the parent. Variation was detected for the molar ratios of Ca:Phy, Phy:Fe, and Phy:Zn (1.27–10.41, 1.40–5.32, and 1.78–11.78, respectively). The results of this study show how genetic variation generated through radiation can be useful to achieve nutrient biofortification of crops to overcome human malnutrition.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6437721
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher Hindawi
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-64377212019-04-18 Mutant Lines of Spring Wheat with Increased Iron, Zinc, and Micronutrients in Grains and Enhanced Bioavailability for Human Health Kenzhebayeva, Saule Abekova, Alfia Atabayeva, Saule Yernazarova, Gulzira Omirbekova, Nargul Zhang, Guoping Turasheva, Svetlana Asrandina, Saltanat Sarsu, Fatma Wang, Yarong Biomed Res Int Research Article Deficiency of metals, primarily Fe and Zn, affects over half of the world's population. Human diets dominated by cereal products cause micronutrient malnutrition, which is common in many developing countries where populations depend heavily on staple grain crops such as wheat, maize, and rice. Biofortification is one of the most effective approaches to alleviate malnutrition. Genetically stable mutant spring wheat lines (M(7) generation) produced via 100 or 200 Gy gamma treatments to broaden genetic variation for grain nutrients were analyzed for nutritionally important minerals (Ca, Fe, and Zn), their bioavailability, and grain protein content (GPC). Variation was 172.3–883.0 mg/kg for Ca, 40.9–89.0 mg/kg for Fe, and 22.2–89.6 mg/kg for Zn. In mutant lines, among the investigated minerals, the highest increases in concentrations were observed in Fe, Zn, and Ca when compared to the parental cultivar Zhenis. Some mutant lines, mostly in the 100 Gy-derived germplasm, had more than two-fold higher Fe, Zn, and Ca concentrations, lower phytic acid concentration (1.4–2.1-fold), and 6.5–7% higher grain protein content compared to the parent. Variation was detected for the molar ratios of Ca:Phy, Phy:Fe, and Phy:Zn (1.27–10.41, 1.40–5.32, and 1.78–11.78, respectively). The results of this study show how genetic variation generated through radiation can be useful to achieve nutrient biofortification of crops to overcome human malnutrition. Hindawi 2019-03-14 /pmc/articles/PMC6437721/ /pubmed/31001559 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/9692053 Text en Copyright © 2019 Saule Kenzhebayeva et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kenzhebayeva, Saule
Abekova, Alfia
Atabayeva, Saule
Yernazarova, Gulzira
Omirbekova, Nargul
Zhang, Guoping
Turasheva, Svetlana
Asrandina, Saltanat
Sarsu, Fatma
Wang, Yarong
Mutant Lines of Spring Wheat with Increased Iron, Zinc, and Micronutrients in Grains and Enhanced Bioavailability for Human Health
title Mutant Lines of Spring Wheat with Increased Iron, Zinc, and Micronutrients in Grains and Enhanced Bioavailability for Human Health
title_full Mutant Lines of Spring Wheat with Increased Iron, Zinc, and Micronutrients in Grains and Enhanced Bioavailability for Human Health
title_fullStr Mutant Lines of Spring Wheat with Increased Iron, Zinc, and Micronutrients in Grains and Enhanced Bioavailability for Human Health
title_full_unstemmed Mutant Lines of Spring Wheat with Increased Iron, Zinc, and Micronutrients in Grains and Enhanced Bioavailability for Human Health
title_short Mutant Lines of Spring Wheat with Increased Iron, Zinc, and Micronutrients in Grains and Enhanced Bioavailability for Human Health
title_sort mutant lines of spring wheat with increased iron, zinc, and micronutrients in grains and enhanced bioavailability for human health
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6437721/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31001559
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/9692053
work_keys_str_mv AT kenzhebayevasaule mutantlinesofspringwheatwithincreasedironzincandmicronutrientsingrainsandenhancedbioavailabilityforhumanhealth
AT abekovaalfia mutantlinesofspringwheatwithincreasedironzincandmicronutrientsingrainsandenhancedbioavailabilityforhumanhealth
AT atabayevasaule mutantlinesofspringwheatwithincreasedironzincandmicronutrientsingrainsandenhancedbioavailabilityforhumanhealth
AT yernazarovagulzira mutantlinesofspringwheatwithincreasedironzincandmicronutrientsingrainsandenhancedbioavailabilityforhumanhealth
AT omirbekovanargul mutantlinesofspringwheatwithincreasedironzincandmicronutrientsingrainsandenhancedbioavailabilityforhumanhealth
AT zhangguoping mutantlinesofspringwheatwithincreasedironzincandmicronutrientsingrainsandenhancedbioavailabilityforhumanhealth
AT turashevasvetlana mutantlinesofspringwheatwithincreasedironzincandmicronutrientsingrainsandenhancedbioavailabilityforhumanhealth
AT asrandinasaltanat mutantlinesofspringwheatwithincreasedironzincandmicronutrientsingrainsandenhancedbioavailabilityforhumanhealth
AT sarsufatma mutantlinesofspringwheatwithincreasedironzincandmicronutrientsingrainsandenhancedbioavailabilityforhumanhealth
AT wangyarong mutantlinesofspringwheatwithincreasedironzincandmicronutrientsingrainsandenhancedbioavailabilityforhumanhealth