| Influence of Cultivar and Environment on Water-Soluble and Water-Insoluble Arabinoxylans in Soft Wheat Cereal Chemistry 83:617-623 |
| Finnie,S.M., Bettge,A.D., and Morris,C.F. |
| Arabinoxylans are hydrophilic nonstarch polysaccharides found in
wheat grain as minor constituents. Arabinoxylans can associate with large
amounts of water through hydrogen bonding and can form oxidative gels.
These properties are important factors in end-use quality of wheat. The
objective of this study was to delineate the influence of wheat cultivar and
growing environment on variation in water-soluble (WS-AX), waterinsoluble
(WI-AX), and total (TO-AX) arabinoxylan contents of flour and
whole grain meal. This study included seven spring and 20 winter soft
white wheat cultivars grown in 10 and 12 environments, respectively
(each evenly split over two crop years). Univariate analysis of variance
(ANOVA) and multivariate analysis of variance with canonical analysis
(MANOVA) was used to evaluate sources of variation. Variation in arabinoxylan
contents and absolute amounts (xylose equivalents) among the
two cultivar sample sets (spring and winter) was similar, and both cultivar
and environment were significant sources of variation. The cultivar-byenvironment
interaction was relatively unimportant. Results indicate that
the variation in arabinoxylan content is primarily influenced by cultivar
and secondarily influenced by environment. Within arabinoxylan fractions,
WS-AX content is primarily influenced by genotype, while WI-AX
content is more greatly influenced by the environment.
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