Data in Brief (Feb 2023)

Bread wheat (T. aestivum) variability: Phenotypic and genotypic data from 75 varieties

  • Mélanie Lavoignat,
  • Emmanuelle Bancel,
  • Hélène Rimbert,
  • Sandrine Bagnon,
  • Michaël Benigna,
  • Alain Chassin,
  • Sandrine Berges,
  • Annie Faye,
  • Emmanuel Heumez,
  • Sibille Perrochon,
  • Larbi Rhazi,
  • Bernard Valluis,
  • Flavie Souply,
  • Marie Cécile Leroux,
  • Pascal Giraudeau,
  • Catherine Ravel

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 46
p. 108807

Abstract

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Most bread wheat is consumed after processing, which mainly depends on the quantity and quality of protein in the grain. Storage protein content and composition particularly influence the end use quality of milled grain products. Storage proteins are components of the gluten network that confer dough viscoelasticity, an essential property for processing. To explore grain storage protein diversity, 75 bread wheat accessions were grown with two replicates each at two locations. Grains were harvested at maturity and samples were phenotyped for each site and each replicate plant. Grain hardness, thousand-kernel weight and grain nitrogen content were measured. The protein composition of flour from each replicate was characterised by reverse phase-high performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC). The molecular distribution of flour polymers was determined by asymmetric flow field-flow fractionation (AF4) and dough technological properties were assessed using a Glutomatic system and a Chopin alveograph. In addition, the 75 accessions were genotyped by the BreedWheat 35k genotyping array (Axiom TaBW35K) containing 34,746 single nucleotide polymorphism markers (SNPs).The dataset produced by this work includes six files with raw data, two files with protocols and figures. Data show the genotypic and phenotypic variabilities of the material used and can be used to explore genetic and environmental effects on traits involved in grain protein quality.This dataset is associated to the research article “Differences in bread protein digestibility traced to wheat cultivar traits” [1].

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