4.7 Article

Analyzing a Saturation Effect of Nitrogen Fertilization on Baking Volume and Grain Protein Concentration in Wheat

Journal

AGRICULTURE-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agriculture13010020

Keywords

baking volume; nitrogen fertilization; protein composition; protein concentration; Triticum aestivum; wheat grain

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Some wheat cultivars exhibit a linear relationship between grain protein concentration (GPC) and baking volume, while others show a saturation curve. High nitrogen application in pot experiments can reliably achieve GPC > 17%, which is not commonly attained in field conditions. The specific effects of nitrogen on grain protein composition and its relationship with baking volume were investigated in four wheat cultivars. Increasing nitrogen levels resulted in varying changes in grain protein fractions and baking volume in different cultivars.
Some wheat cultivars show a linear relationship between grain protein concentration (GPC) and baking volume, but others display a saturation curve. Such a saturation curve could be general, but in some cultivars it might only appear at GPC > 17%. However, such GPC is mostly not achieved in the field. Pot experiments with high nitrogen application reliably result in GPC > 17%. In a pot experiment with a high (N1) and an excessive N level (N2) and four cultivars (Akteur, Arnold, Discus and Hystar), the change in grain protein composition and the relationship between different protein fractions and baking volume at GPC > 17% was investigated. GPC ranged from 17 to 24% and mean nitrogen content per grain from 1.2 to 1.8 mg. The N2 treatment increased GPC and mean nitrogen content per grain in the Akteur and Discus cultivar, but not in Arnold and Hystar. N2 increased concentration of gliadin by 10 to 34% and glutenin macropolymer (GMP) in all cultivars by 12 to 73%. Glutenin concentration was increased by N2 in Akteur and Discus (19 to 36%), but was decreased by N2 in the Arnold and Hystar cultivar. Baking volume was moderately increased by N2 in all cultivars by 6 to 9% and correlated significantly with most glutenin fractions in the Akteur and Discus cultivar, with GMP in Arnold and with HMW-GS to LMW-GS ratio in Hystar. Thus, specific effects on grain protein by N2 were responsible for the increased baking volume in each cultivar. However, as gliadin and its sub-fractions hardly correlated with baking volume, a positive effect of increasing gliadin proteins on baking quality was not obvious.

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