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1 n and was not incorporated into domesticated wheat.
2 were present in awned mutants of an awnless wheat.
3 ve the starch content and yield potential of wheat.
4 targeting one or some of the TaCLPB genes in wheat.
5 bably a key functional component of Qfhb1 in wheat.
6 candidate genes that confer HM tolerance in wheat.
7 d genes controlling micronutrient content in wheat.
8 of micronutrients, mainly targeted in bread wheat.
9 ly be used to improve grain yield and NUE in wheat.
10 riticum urartu, the A genome donor of common wheat.
11 Qfhb1-carrier wheat but not in Qfhb1-carrier wheat.
12 n to modulate recombination in allopolyploid wheat.
13 HCH indicated its transformation in soil and wheat.
14 sight into suppression of rust resistance in wheat.
15 orld and is a leading cause of yield loss in wheat.
16 rotein, controls the stem solidness trait in wheat.
17 o engineer improved micronutrient content in wheat.
18 erties, and the growth, yield and quality of wheat.
19 (N) and phosphorus (P) metabolism in winter wheat.
20 se trypsin inhibitors (ATIs), a component of wheat, activate the intestine's innate immune response v
22 itis herpetiformis (DH), gluten ataxia (GA), wheat allergy (WA), and non-celiac gluten sensitivity (N
23 related disorders, including celiac disease, wheat allergy, and nonceliac gluten sensitivity (NCGS),
24 tmospheric CO(2) concentration ([CO(2) ]) on wheat-AMF carbon-for-nutrient exchange remain critical k
25 tici causes Septoria tritici blotch (STB) of wheat, an economically important disease causing yield l
26 ariable for virulence to resistance genes in wheat and adapt quickly to resistance genes in wheat cul
30 t a wide range of fungal pathogens of maize, wheat and locusts, without affecting their respective ho
31 molecular-weight (HMW) root exudates of both wheat and maize plants indicate the presence of complex,
33 ortunities to manipulate stem development in wheat and other monocots for agricultural or industrial
34 the yield of self-pollinating crops such as wheat and rice, but future hybrid performance may depend
37 ccurred early in the evolution of tetraploid wheat and was then domesticated into hexaploid (AABBDD)
39 this study, both gluten (barley, rye, spelt, wheat) and gluten-free (amaranth, buckwheat, corn, quino
40 d in Triticum aestivum 'Apogee' (dwarf bread wheat) and resulted in an 18% increase in grain yield.
42 zation was reduced in mlo mutants of barley, wheat, and M. truncatula, and this was accompanied by a
43 or the three main staple crops (i.e., maize, wheat, and rice), together accounting for 72% of synthet
44 tors of starch synthesis first identified in wheat, and they could be superior targets to improve the
46 proteins, such as egg, soya, cow's milk and wheat, are detectable in breastmilk for many hours or da
47 utionary history is similar to that of bread wheat, arising through polyploidization after hybridizat
52 nhancement under diffuse light was found for wheat, barley and rapeseed, whereas the lowest was for p
54 ns for five major arable crops (pea, potato, wheat, barley, rapeseed) and cover crops characterized b
55 res analysis permitted to correctly classify wheats based on their cultivation area and species, and
56 4.5%) dialyzable fractions were observed for wheat-based breakfast cereal and chocolate respectively.
64 ic potential of seven commercially available wheat beers were evaluated using bottom-up MS with the a
66 llium (0.3 +/- 0.3 s P = 0.009), a fall with wheat bran (-0.2 +/- 0.2 s; P = 0.02), but no change wit
67 lium (mean +/- SD: 14 +/- 5 h) compared with wheat bran (6 +/- 2 h, P = 0.003) and was associated wit
68 al probiotic) was immobilized on delignified wheat bran (DWB) and was used to produce a functional po
70 ossibilities for the cascade valorization of wheat bran into enriched protein and non-starch polysacc
71 proteins and feruloylated arabinoxylan from wheat bran is proposed, involving a protein isolation st
73 sed in this study, microfluidisation reduced wheat bran median particle size to 14.8 mum and disinteg
74 physical entrapment of oil within the large wheat bran particles protects RP from the action of wate
77 y to induce physicochemical modifications in wheat bran using microfluidisation was investigated.
79 line extraction reduced the recalcitrance of wheat bran, thus improving the total yields of the subse
80 the activity of a commercial endoxylanase on wheat bran; a steady release of xylose monosaccharide wa
82 cessibility of phenolic compounds from whole-wheat breads: enzymatic bioprocessing and addition of gr
84 can potentially increase the genetic gain in wheat breeding for complex traits such as grain and biom
89 to biotic and abiotic stresses in hexaploid wheat can be drastically improved through wheat-alien in
91 contigs showed identity with the long arm of wheat chromosome 6B confirming the introgression on 6BL
96 s, where previously the consensus within the wheat community was to perform this process manually.
98 splanting or double cropping is suitable for wheat-cotton intercropping to prevent late or early chil
100 opes, in a set of 60 German hexaploid winter wheat cultivars from 1891 to 2010 and grown in three con
101 ecular analysis revealed that hollow-stemmed wheat cultivars such as Kronos carry a single copy of Td
106 sing daily weather information and a dryland wheat dataset for 71 cultivars across 17 locations in So
107 eriod of six weeks as part of a biofortified wheat diet containing increased NA, Fe, Zn and DMA (long
109 of timely sown wheat (TSW) and delayed sown wheat (DSW) were compared to see the effects of heat str
110 at species (durum and bread wheat, turanicum wheat, einkorn, emmer and spelt), the corresponding mill
111 dominantly responsible for awn inhibition in wheat, encodes a C2H2 zinc finger protein with EAR motif
112 f H3K27me2 and H3K27me3 distributions during wheat evolution, which support roles for H3K27me2 in sil
114 ndent of climate, season, and region, indoor wheat farming could be environmentally superior, as less
116 Slugs were collected in a commercial winter wheat field in which a 5x6 trapping grid had been establ
117 ne of the major quality issues of wholegrain wheat flour and products, despite their rich endogenous
118 s were produced with partial substitution of wheat flour by corn (CF), green banana (GF) and rice flo
120 s, and WPC could be used as a substitute for wheat flour in producing sponge cakes of high quality.
124 in order to better understand the effect of wheat flour substitution, flour type and concentration o
127 s (wheat flour, durum wheat flour, wholemeal wheat flour, corn flour, rice flour) on the bioaccessibi
128 , hydrothermal treatment, and food matrices (wheat flour, durum wheat flour, wholemeal wheat flour, c
129 In a starch-gluten-WU-AX-water model and in wheat flour, water was distributed over the different co
130 tment, and food matrices (wheat flour, durum wheat flour, wholemeal wheat flour, corn flour, rice flo
134 were fed wheat- or ATI-containing diets or a wheat-free (control) diet and then given dextran sodium
135 study will benefit the understanding of the wheat gene responses as result of alien gene(s) or chrom
137 ssociation analysis identified 35 SNPs in 12 wheat genes and one intergenic SNP in the Sbwm1 region t
139 r understanding of how the complexity of the wheat genome influences the distribution of chromatin st
140 The recent publication of a high-quality wheat genome sequence, alongside gene expression atlases
141 gely owing to the size and complexity of the wheat genome(1), and the lack of genome-assembly data fo
144 A study of the Chromosome 1 TaCLPB in four wheat genotypes demonstrated unique patterns of the homo
145 the leaf and whole-plant level for 14 bread wheat genotypes grown in pots under glasshouse condition
146 a 143 million grain yield data points for 28 wheat genotypes in 16 locations in France, over 16 years
150 esponded to an approximately 50% decrease in wheat germ agglutinin (WGA)-labeled components of the GC
152 250, a highly purified fraction of fermented wheat germ extract (FWGE), increases the carbon flux int
162 dietary fibre with fractions extracted from wheat grains, have been characterized either for their t
163 s, Puccinia triticina, is found in the major wheat growing regions of the world and is a leading caus
164 hat expression of a fusion protein combining wheat GROWTH-REGULATING FACTOR 4 (GRF4) and its cofactor
165 itor of both modern tetraploid and hexaploid wheats, harbors many powdery mildew resistance genes.
167 landraces represent sources of variation for wheat improvement to address challenges from climate cha
168 ue to provide a route for nutrient uptake by wheat in the future, despite predicted rises in atmosphe
170 Variation in awn length in domesticated wheat is controlled primarily by three major genes, most
173 reme weather impacts on staple crops such as wheat is vital for creating adaptation strategies and in
177 that ice-nucleation-induced wounding of the wheat leaf provides additional openings for fungal entry
180 Overexpressing WFhb1-1 in non-Qfhb1-carrier wheat led to a significant decrease (p < 0.01) in Fusari
184 variability of GHG emissions intensities for wheat, maize, and rice in China from 1949 to 2012 using
192 57BL/6 wild-type and Tlr4(-/-) mice were fed wheat- or ATI-containing diets or a wheat-free (control)
193 ion of microbiota from feces of mice fed the wheat- or ATI-containing diets to intestines of mice on
194 ctroscopic method for the screening of durum wheat pasta samples adulterated with common wheat at the
196 r results indicate that during grain filling wheat plants face limitations to the assimilation proces
198 ontrary to their significant expansionduring wheat polyploidization, suggesting that natural selectio
199 BLUP model for grain yield (GY) using a soft wheat population that was evaluated in four environments
201 ll as an 8-kb deletion in MSH4D in hexaploid wheat, predicted to create a nonfunctional pseudogene.
202 lthough lower profitability due to declining wheat prices appears to explain the HAR trend, fluctuati
203 Constitutive overexpression of B1 in awned wheat produced an awnletted phenotype with pleiotropic e
204 A total of 558 isolates of P. triticina from wheat producing regions in North America, South America,
205 at produce food toxins, currently devastates wheat production worldwide, yet few resistance resources
211 bicides can cause significant differences in wheat protein chemistry and shikimic acid levels, especi
213 of genetic and environmental variability of wheat proteins on immunochemical analyses, which affects
219 ls, while silencing WFhb1-1 in Qfhb1-carrier wheat resulted in a significant increase (p < 0.01) in F
222 w that global caloric production from maize, wheat, rice, and soybean falls by 13 (+/-1)%, 11 (+/-8)%
223 tacle does not affect the growth rate of the wheat root axes, but that it does influence the root tra
225 Time-resolved computed tomography images of wheat root systems were used as the geometry for 3D citr
228 y analysis of a set of incurred chickpea and wheat samples (glyphosate range 0.5-36 mg/kg) and compar
229 e proposed biosensor was evaluated by spiked wheat samples and average recoveries (93 and 90.1%) were
230 assess the presence of DON and ergosterol in wheat samples through prediction and classification mode
232 lauxifen-methyl (HM), a postemergence (POST) wheat-selective synthetic auxin herbicide, using alien s
233 encompassed by the non-celiac self-reported wheat sensitivity (NCSRWS) might be related to different
235 ne contents were quantified in six different wheat species (durum and bread wheat, turanicum wheat, e
243 l bacterial and fungal communities by adding wheat straw to consecutive watermelon soil in the greenh
245 in T. monococcum was not found in polyploid wheat, suggesting an opportunity to introduce a novel re
246 tions, domesticated emmer, durum, and common wheat, suggesting that the ancestral Pm41 was restricted
250 var. durum) and bread (Triticum aestivum L.) wheat that provides resistance to the wheat stem sawfly.
251 by a few major annual crops (maize, soybean, wheat) that are mostly grown on fields with a very low t
254 ng resistance to Karnal Bunt (KB) disease in wheat through a genome-wide association study (GWAS) on
256 tification of functional resistance genes in wheat to accelerate the breeding and engineering of dise
257 le and five scaffold assemblies of hexaploid wheat to explore the genomic diversity among wheat lines
258 the efficiency and speed of regeneration in wheat, triticale and rice and increases the number of tr
259 gene Sr60, a race-specific gene from diploid wheat Triticum monococcum L. that encodes a protein with
261 CO(2) fixation in cereals crops like bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) is also contributed by ear
265 two staple crops, rice (Oryza sativa L.) and wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), and evaluates potential ri
268 e flowering and inflorescence development of wheat (Triticum aestivum) as daylengths extend naturally
270 domesticated into hexaploid (AABBDD) common wheat (Triticum aestivum), as well as an 8-kb deletion i
271 tetraploid (Triticum turgidum) and hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum), the spikelet is a short indet
272 from a plant virus, pea (Pisum sativum) and wheat (Triticum aestivum), was just upstream of a minima
274 g from Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) to wheat (Triticum spp.), including many crop and model spe
277 ed as a flat block of epoxy-embedded awns of wheat (Triticum turgidum), thin sections of native epide
278 tics of grain, meal and flour of timely sown wheat (TSW) and delayed sown wheat (DSW) were compared t
279 six different wheat species (durum and bread wheat, turanicum wheat, einkorn, emmer and spelt), the c
283 r simultaneous phenotyping of popular winter wheat varieties from US Midwest and advanced breeding li
284 Wheatgrass juice powder (WJP) from four wheat varieties grown using soil, coco-peat with nutrien
285 This provides fertile ground to develop wheat varieties of the future by exploring specific gene
287 it is important to study lipid stability of wheat varieties, together with their endogenous antioxid
289 lone various genes of interest in the Apogee wheat variety, which has no current genome sequence.
294 a commercially operable paternal HI line in wheat with a ~7% HI rate, identified by screening genome
297 ion models, finding that extreme heat drives wheat yield losses, with an additional 24 h of exposure
299 ing scenario of +1 degrees C show an average wheat yield reduction of 8.5%, which increases to 18.4%
300 nd quantify the leading modes (PC) of global wheat yield variability where the top four PCs explain n
301 ppears to explain the HAR trend, fluctuating wheat yields-largely explained by temperature exposure-d