3.9 Article

Characterization of HMW glutenin subunit Bx7OE and its distribution in common wheat and related species

Journal

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S1479262113000476

Keywords

quality improvement; RP-HPLC; SDS-PAGE; STS markers; Triticum aestivum L

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31271703, 31101145]
  2. Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology [2013DFG30530]
  3. National Key Projects for Transgenic Crops of China [2011ZX08009-003-004]

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The overexpression of wheat Bx7 subunit (Bx7(OE)) encoded by the Glu-B1al allele is originated from a duplication event of the Bx7 gene, and has a positive effect on gluten strength. Thus, it is an important genetic resource for wheat quality improvement. In this study, the Bx7(OE) subunit from a large number of bread wheat and related species was characterized by sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) and Sequence-Tagged sites (STS) markers. Only 31 bread wheat varieties were found to carry Bx7(OE). RP-HPLC quantification analysis revealed that the mean proportion of the Bx7(OE) subunit to the total amount of high-molecular-weight glutenin subunits among the 31 bread wheat varieties was 41.8%, which is much higher than that of varieties with the normal Bx7 subunit (generally at 30%). Flour quality analysis of seven representative varieties with Bx7(OE) and three with the normal Bx7 subunit showed that the varieties with Bx7(OE) generally displayed better gluten strength than those with the normal Bx7 subunit. STS markers demonstrated that, in addition to the 31 bread wheat varieties with Bx7(OE), no PCR products were obtained from the related Triticum and Aegilops species. This suggests that the retroelement-mediated recombination event at the Glu-B1 locus could have occurred more recently, later than the formation of hexaploid wheat. The Bx7(OE) subunit is mainly distributed in some bread wheat varieties from American countries with a low frequency, which is of particular importance for the quality improvement of wheat gluten.

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