Crop Journal (Apr 2018)

Near-infrared reflectance spectroscopy reveals wide variation in major components of sesame seeds from Africa and Asia

  • Komivi Dossa,
  • Xin Wei,
  • Marème Niang,
  • Pan Liu,
  • Yanxin Zhang,
  • Linhai Wang,
  • Boshou Liao,
  • Ndiaga Cissé,
  • Xiurong Zhang,
  • Diaga Diouf

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cj.2017.10.003
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2
pp. 202 – 206

Abstract

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Sesame is an important oilseed crop in Africa and Asia, owing to its high nutritional quality seed and market value. Variation in sesame seed components including oil, oleic acid, linoleic acid, and protein was investigated by near-infrared reflectance spectrometry in 139 samples collected from different countries. Oil and protein contents were between 40.8% and 60.3% (mean 53.0%) and 15.5% to 25.5% (mean 20.4%), respectively. Linoleic acid, ranging from 31.8% to 52.4% (mean 46%) was more abundant than oleic acid (31.8%–50.6%, mean 38.1%). Light-seeded samples displayed higher nutritional quality, as they were richer in oil, protein, and linoleic acid than dark seeds. Samples from Africa had higher oil and linoleic acid contents, while Asian samples had higher oleic content. The analysis revealed West African sesame cultivars containing especially high levels of seed components, which may command high market values. Two clusters of sesame samples grouped by seed composition were obtained, including one cluster with high oil and oleic acid content and the other with high protein and linoleic acid content. This study revealed that sesame samples from Africa and Asia harbor high variation for major seed components and also provided background information for breeding high-nutrition varieties according to the demands of sesame seed markets.

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