Increased stability and control of flour and food color. Greater food brightness. Better control of off-flavors. Potential agronomic benefits such as increased seed longevity.
About
Background The demand for higher grade and specialty food quality specifications for grains is growing. Montana State University is seeking wheat breeders interested in developing varieties where end-product food properties such as color, shelf-life and off flavoring can be optimized. Through traditional breeding, MSU researchers are selecting genes that regulate the level of seed lipoxygenase, an enzyme known to impact flour color, pasta brightness, and affect other wheat-based food traits. MSU researchers are looking for collaborators interested finding new beneficial properties for end-product quality in wheat lines. Research and development The Giroux lab at MSU is seeking collaborators interested in applying wheat seed lipoxygenase gene selection for improving end-product quality to enhance market share and enable new product development. The lab contains a library of hard red spring and a soft white spring wheat populations that are available for screening of mutations in wheat seed lipoxygenase genes and can also screen varieties provided by collaborators. The MSU screening capability includes testing for improved end-product color, taste and shelf-life.
Key Benefits
Improved wheat quality through non-GMO mutations
Applications
wheat breeding