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1 etreatments of flours (rye, oat, sorghum and millet).
2 nce of ferulic acid and cinnamic acid in the millet.
3 ing genes from far related crops like finger millet.
4 haploid offspring in transgenic sexual pearl millet.
5 th cDNA of a group B MPK (PgMPK4) from pearl millet.
6 , open-pan boiled and microwave-heated pearl millet.
7 ased during sprouting and roasting of finger millet.
8 c acids were highest phenolic acids of pearl millet.
9 essible polyphenols after sprouting of pearl millet.
10 ve effect of the 5'-UTR deletions in foxtail millet.
11 ail millet and its presumed progenitor green millet.
12 acids were major phenolic acids in barnyard millet.
13 t the genomics-assisted improvement of proso millet.
14 ery of minor drought tolerant grains such as millet.
15 ids detected in all the extracts of browntop millet.
16 ould be used to increase steryl ferulates in millet.
17 ism still remains to be elucidated in finger millet.
18 late is naturally present as bound phenol in millet.
19 nt of pesticide use for the minor crop proso millet.
20 ve contributed to the evolution of broomcorn millet.
21 enhancement of bioactive components of Kodo millet.
22 major flavonoids in the soluble fractions of millets.
23 l was the predominant flavonoid found in raw millets.
24 n phenolic acids and flavonoids in processed millets.
25 asses, and limited domestication of barnyard millets.
26 ies have been domesticated and cultivated as millets.
27 ctivity increased up to 77.32% on flaking of millets.
28 setum glaucum) and proso (Panicum miliaceum) millets.
29 a and Africa and is a model system for other millets.
30 acrylamide in flours of sorghum (160 ug/kg); millet (447 ug/kg); barley (516 ug/kg); triticale (868 u
31 ng bean (65.2% +/- 7.1%), followed by finger millet (68.4 %+/- 5.3%) and rice (78.5% +/- 3.5%), and w
33 he wild ancestor of Setaria italica (foxtail millet), a resilient crop that provides good yields in d
35 ing from an unusual symbiosis between finger millet and a root-inhabiting bacterial endophyte, M6 (En
37 mprovements on a popular cultivar of foxtail millet and have achieved a genome assembly of 477 Mbp in
38 he chemical-nutritional composition of pearl millet and improved in vitro iron bioavailability; there
45 an and Haimenkou sites with mixed farming of millet and rice dating to between 4,500 and 3,000 years
47 stress, recent findings have revealed pearl millet and sorghum pistils to be equally sensitive to he
50 rice, dryland cereals such as sorghum, pearl millet and wheat have optimised their flower opening dur
51 the core mycobiome revealed that cultivated millet and wild relatives had dissimilar groups of hub t
53 hreatens such important crops as corn, rice, millet, and sorghum, creating concern for its potential
57 ts suggest the potential utility of barnyard millet as an ingredient in functional foods for controll
58 millet depicted the germination potential of millets as a source of valuable bioactive compounds.
59 t the potential application of underutilized millets as functional food ingredients for regulating po
61 evidence showing a significant reduction of millet-associated dates occurring during the cooling cli
62 barley) and C4 crops (foxtail and broomcorn millets) at glacial and postglacial Ca , measuring grain
63 ming and microwave treatments of whole grain millets (barnyard, foxtail and proso) on their phenolic
64 re the present, coinciding with the onset of millet-based agriculture and significant environmental c
65 n of zinc (FAZ and TAZ, respectively) from a millet-based porridge containing SQ-LNS with and without
67 42, P < 0.01), fish (beta = 0.34, P < 0.05), millet (beta = -0.27, P < 0.01), and wheat (beta = -0.34
68 llection of diverse origin and predict pearl millet biofortification prospects for essential micronut
69 e and nutrition quality of whole grain pearl millet bread containing 50% of wheat flour was investiga
72 f unmalted gluten free (GF) grains (sorghum, millet, buckwheat, quinoa and amaranth) was used in brew
73 ane), Zea (maize), Oryza (rice), Pennisetum (millet, buffelgrass), the Triticeae (wheat, barley, oat,
78 ecially, the high Ca concentration in finger millet, compared to in other cereals, could play a vital
80 . 800 B.C.E., almost certainly indicative of millet consumption, an interpretation supported by archa
81 values typical of C(4) vegetation indicating millet consumption, or that of a grain with comparable d
85 d kinase activity was observed between pearl millet cultivars 852B and IP18292 in response to inocula
88 or whole-genome sequencing from four foxtail millet cultivars, and comparative analysis revealed that
92 luates parboiling as a pre-treatment step in millet decortication and its impact on phenolic profile
93 boiling could be an effective way to improve millet decortication yield as well as produce millet pro
94 gs indicate that PgMPK/s contribute to pearl millet defense against the downy mildew pathogen by acti
95 ination under optimum conditions in the Kodo millet depicted the germination potential of millets as
100 Zea mays), sorghum (Sorghum bicolor), finger millet (Eleusine coracana) and cowpea (Vigna unguiculata
102 Drought transcriptome analysis of finger millet (Eleusine coracana) by cDNA subtraction identifie
107 Sino-Tibetan originating with north Chinese millet farmers around 7200 B.P. and suggest a link to th
113 icantly alter fatty acids composition of the millet flour as obtained with Gas chromatography-flame i
114 ves nutritional, health composition of pearl millet flour as well as the sensorial acceptability of s
115 he ABTS-RSA and the DPPH-RSA of the radiated millet flour exhibited non-significant changes (p<0.05).
117 germinated cooked millet flour and extruded millet flour improved iron availability in vitro compare
120 mum conditions for producing germinated Kodo millet flour of highest TPC (83.01mgGAE/100g), TFC (87.5
126 e Panicoideae (including maize, sorghum, and millet) from the Pooideae (including wheat, barley, and
128 ping-by-sequencing (GBS) data onto the proso millet genome, resulting in 5621 quality-filtered SNPs i
131 -wide transcriptional analysis of two finger millet genotypes differing in their level of salinity to
135 tional and phytochemical profiling of finger millet genotypes showed its potentiality to become sourc
136 ive leaf transcriptome of contrasting finger millet genotypes using IonProton platform and generated
143 nd charred grains; and radiocarbon dating of millet grains from archaeological contexts dated from th
145 potential utilization of germinated foxtail millet grains in various functional and convenience food
149 Long considered a 'poor man's crop', finger millet has regained attention over the past decade for i
152 lessly integrates human hair (HH) fibers and millet husk ash (MHA) as a sustainable alternative.
153 for enhanced tensile strength and utilizing millet husk ash to replace sand, these materials not onl
154 d 57.26microg/ml) and CO4 cultivar of little millet (IC50, 18.97 and 55.69microg/ml) displayed strong
155 d bound fractions of CO7 cultivar of foxtail millet (IC50, 22.37 and 57.26microg/ml) and CO4 cultivar
156 genome orthologous to QTL regions on foxtail millet identified a number of transcription factors and
158 Extraction of free and bound phenols from millet in acidic and basic hydrolytic conditions were co
159 e data represent the first identification of millet in archaeological ceramic vessels, providing a me
162 Here, we propose a new approach to identify millet in pottery vessels, a crop that spread throughout
163 y plant pathogen, in cultivated than in wild millet in semi-arid and semi-humid zones, and higher rel
164 ence of robust archaeobotanical evidence for millet in semi-arid Mesopotamia (ancient Iraq) has led m
165 l review of the occurrence of archaeological millet in the Caucasus, up to Antiquity; isotopic analys
177 production altered the nutritional value of millet, leading to increased free phenolic content (~30%
178 we gave locusts the choice between untreated millet leaves and leaves that received one of the two fe
179 ingle-cell transcriptomic landscape of pearl millet leaves under heat stress and normal conditions, c
183 t was heavy in agricultural products (namely millet), meaning that they lived adjacent to or among so
185 e ileal IAA digestibility of 4 (rice, finger millet, mung bean, and hen egg) commonly consumed comple
189 or proteins, and regions syntenic with pearl millet or maize genomic regions that have been previousl
193 Setaria italica), two cultivars of broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum) and three varieties of green
194 nical evidence of the summer grain broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum) in Mesopotamia, identified us
195 ith continued application of ethylene, white millet (Panicum miliaceum) seedlings had a rapid and tra
196 people harvested and stored enough broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum) to provision themselves and t
197 olite IN-J9Z38 were investigated using proso millet (Panicum miliaceum) under open-field conditions t
198 at is enriched in grains of common/broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum), in Bronze Age pottery vessel
202 Finger millet (Eleusine coracana) and pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum) were evaluated for polypheno
210 fective RNAs (D-RNAs) accumulated de novo in millet plants coinfected with PMV and either of two SPMV
217 This study investigated the effects of pearl millet (PM) vs. cool-season pasture (CSP) on animal perf
219 Furthermore, we show that increased pearl millet primary root growth is correlated with increased
220 illet decortication yield as well as produce millet products with higher phenolic acids antioxidant a
221 nd in vitro digestibility of two traditional millet products, steam-cooked couscous and porridge, mad
223 efficiency ranged from 11.2% to 78.9%, with millet protein extracted by ethanol showing better perfo
231 six diverse cultivars of foxtail and little millets revealed that their total phenolic content range
232 e determination of copper in cereals (maize, millet, rice, wheat, gram, lentils, kidney beans and gre
237 ippinensis), sugar cane (P. sacchari), pearl millet (Sclerospora graminicola) and rose (Peronospora s
238 en showed that ZmANT1 binds the promoters of millet SCR1, GNC, and AN3, which are key regulators of K
240 biosynthesis inhibitor paclobutrazol caused millet seedlings to have a prolonged growth inhibition r
242 shift mutants of the ANT1 ortholog in the C4 millet Setaria viridis by the CRISPR/Cas9 technique.
246 oci responsible for these changes in foxtail millet (Setaria italica), a crop closely related to maiz
247 dehusk and grind twelve cultivars of foxtail millet (Setaria italica), two cultivars of broomcorn mil
252 e a genome resource for the wild plant green millet (Setaria viridis), a model species for studies of
254 udies of the extracted polyphenols from kodo millet showed the predominant presence of ferulic acid a
258 and 30% of hydrothermally treated flours of millet, sorghum, oat, and rye, respectively, acrylamide
259 reasing the area under coarse cereals (i.e., millets, sorghum) improves nutritional supply (on averag
260 meric satellite repeats from maize and pearl millet, species which diverged from rice many millions o
263 n native grains, and a quarter of the ground millet starch grains bore surface damage and also exhibi
264 arch grains; (2) After grinding, the size of millet starch grains increases up to 1.2 times larger th
265 nificantly change the size and morphology of millet starch grains; (2) After grinding, the size of mi
269 recording digestibility of 54-59% in finger millet straw 33-36% in paddy straw and wheat straw, 16%
270 demonstrated degradation of 30-40% in finger millet straw and sorghum stover, 27-32% in paddy straw,
273 gration of the genetic maps of rice, foxtail millet, sugar cane, sorghum, maize, the Triticeae cereal
278 % and 7.62% was observed in paddy and finger millet-treated straws respectively, over the controls co
287 has led most archaeologists to conclude that millet was only grown in the region after the mid-first
289 ission was estimated for 24 days, when pearl millet was planted in sequence to assess growth, nitroge
292 methyl ether uniquely abundant in broomcorn millet, was identified in eight of the analysed samples.
293 onal and antinutritional components of minor millets were correlated with mixolab dough mixing behavi
294 n and foxtail (Setaria viridis spp. italica) millets were cultivated and made significant contributio
296 rop plant genomes to provide maize, sorghum, millet, wheat, oat and barley researchers with the benef
297 rous species, is cross-compatible with pearl millet when used as a pollen donor in the interspecific
298 ction pattern was predominant for unsprouted millets whereas the flaked millets showed V-type crystal
299 ristics of ARF/ARL genes in rice and foxtail millet, which could be deployed for further functional a
300 rent crops (Corn, rice, wheat, sugarcane and millet), while, their topsoil's and multi targeted risks