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The 10,000-Year Success Story of Wheat!

Telma de Sousa, Miguel Ribeiro, Carolina Sabença, Gilberto Igrejas

2021Foods122 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Wheat is one of the most important cereal crops in the world as it is used in the production of a diverse range of traditional and modern processed foods. The ancient varieties einkorn, emmer, and spelt not only played an important role as a source of food but became the ancestors of the modern varieties currently grown worldwide. Hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and tetraploid wheat (Triticum durum Desf.) now account for around 95% and 5% of the world production, respectively. The success of this cereal is inextricably associated with the capacity of its grain proteins, the gluten, to form a viscoelastic dough that allows the transformation of wheat flour into a wide variety of staple forms of food in the human diet. This review aims to give a holistic view of the temporal and proteogenomic evolution of wheat from its domestication to the massively produced high-yield crop of our day.

Topics & Concepts

DomesticationCropStaple foodBiologyAgronomyGlutenBiotechnologyAgricultureFood scienceEcologyWheat and Barley Genetics and PathologyCeliac Disease Research and ManagementAgriculture, Plant Science, Crop Management
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