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 Low-phytate wheat
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Low-Phytate Wheats: How Do They Bake?
By Don Comis
December 28, 2006
Newly developed lines of wheat with one-third less phytate than
current varietiesand up to three times more phosphorus in the flour made
from the wheatare being developed by breeders. They promise to offer
better nutrition, both as feed for livestock and in breads and other
wheat-based foods for people.
Agricultural Research Service (ARS) plant geneticist
Edward
J. Souza and colleagues at the University of Idaho Research and
Extension Center in AberdeenMary J. Guitteri and Karen M.
Petersonconducted a rare study on the effects of low-phytate wheat lines
on baking qualities of the flour made from them. They found there to be no
adverse impact on hard wheat, but some ill effects on soft wheat lines.
Phytate contains phosphorus in a less-digestible form, which leads to
less nutrition for people and animals and much more polluting phosphorus
excretions from livestock. Low phytate levels help people absorb not only more
phosphorus, but also zinc, manganese and iron from whole-grain products, thus
increasing their nutritional benefits. These and other minerals are naturally
present in wheat kernels.
The ARS-University of Idaho study showed that low-phytate hard wheats
might have better dough-mixing qualities for breadmaking. However, the
scientists will need to do further tests to confirm the effects of low phytate
on soft wheat, which appeared to increase the flour's ability to absorb water.
The scientists did their tests on two classes of hard wheat and a premium class
of soft wheat.
Souza, formerly at the University of
Idaho, is now research leader at the ARS
Soft
Wheat Quality Research Unit at Wooster, Ohio. Guitteri is now at the
Ohio Agricultural Research and
Development Center at Wooster.
The scientists also tested the agronomic performance of the
low-phytate wheats grown for two seasons in field studies at Aberdeen and
Tetonia, Idaho. The lines sometimes had lower yields and smaller kernels. The
inconsistent yields suggested the problem was minor, with enough genetic
variation to solve through plant breeding.
Four papers by the scientists on various aspects of low-phytate grains
appear in the November-December 2006
issue of Crop Science.
ARS is the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.