Proceedings
of the XLVII Italian Society of Agricultural Genetics - SIGA Annual Congress
Verona,
Italy - 24/27 September, 2003
ISBN 88-900622-4-X
Oral
Communication Abstract - S2i
ADVANCED
HIGH YIELDING LINES OF HULLESS WINTER BARLEY FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF FUNCTIONAL
FOODS
D. BARABASCHI*,
N. PECCHIONI**, E. FRANCIA*, M. BARONCHELLI*, F. FINOCCHIARO*, B. FERRARI*, A.
GIANINETTI*
*) Istituto
Sperimentale per la Cerealicoltura, Sezione di Fiorenzuola, Via San Protaso
302, 29017 Fiorenzuola d'Arda (PC)
**) Università
degli Studi di Modena e Reggio Emilia, Facoltà di Agraria, Via J.F.
Kennedy 17, 42100 Reggio Emilia
hulless
barley, waxy, beta-glucans, functional food
Barley
is interesting from a nutritional point of view for the typical grain
composition that makes it an ideal cereal for the production of
"functional foods". Such components are mainly beta-glucans (soluble
fiber) and tocols (vitamin E).
The
beta-glucans are an heterogeneous family of polysaccharides, typical of barley
and oats, that constitute the cellular walls of the seed endosperm, and that,
introduced into diet, can contribute to the lowering of hematic cholesterol and
of hematic glucose content. Therefore, the interest of researchers is for the
production of baked foods containing barley flour, then rich in dietary fiber,
i.e. beta-glucans. Also by using specific techniques for the enrichment of
flour in beta-glucans (e.g. turboseparation), it has been possible to produce
high beta-glucan bread and bakery products made of mixed wheat and enriched
barley flour with organolectic characteristics not too far from those made of
pure wheat flour.
Hulless
barley, lacking of glumelets, gives a grain of superior quality for food
respect to hulled barley, although it yields generally less, for both the
absence of the glumelets and the lower efforts on the improvement of the
hulless germplasm.
In the
Istituto Sperimentale per la Cerealicoltura it had been active a breeding
program for winter hulless barley, with the main objective of yield stability,
and based on pedigree and backcross schemes that lead to the release of
cultivar 'Zacinto' (2000). Inside the frame of the programme, a SCAR marker has
been developed for the recognition of heterozyigous genotypes in hulled x
hulless backcrosses, and this marker has been used for the acceleration of such
breeding schemes.
In a second
phase, the resistance to the soil-borne mosaic virus complex (BaMMV-BaYMV), and
to the yellow dwarf virus (BYDV) have been introduced in the programme, by
means of molecular Marker-Assisted Selection.
A specific
replicated yield trial has been recently set up in which the advanced high
yielding hulless lines, together with hulled and hulless checks have been
evaluated in different locations in Italy for the average production of
beta-glucans and tocols, and for the evaluation of the effects of the genotype
x environment interaction on the production of such compounds.
In the last
years, the virus-resistant advanced lines have been also crossed to Canadian
and Australian hulless waxy lines with the aim to develop high yielding,
virus-resistant and high beta-glucan winter barleys. In fact it is well-known
that waxy barley genotypes contain consistently higher-beta-glucans respect to
the ones with normal starch.
The most
recent results of the hulless barley breeding programme for the production of
functional foods at the Istituto Sperimentale per la Cerealicoltura are here
presented.