AI Article Synopsis

  • Tartary buckwheat (TB) has health benefits but low demand due to its thick shell and bitter taste; the study focuses on a newly bred hybrid rice-Tartary buckwheat variety Mikuqiao18 (M18).
  • Compared to its parent variety Jingqiaomai2 (JQ2), M18 showed lower yield per plant but improved taste quality due to thinner shells and favorable changes in cereal taste metrics.
  • The metabolomic analysis revealed 92 metabolites, including beneficial flavonoids and amino acids, suggesting that M18 may enhance both eating quality and health benefits, paving the way for increased cultivation and consumption.

Article Abstract

Tartary buckwheat (TB) is an edible pseudocereal with good health benefits, but its adhering thick shell and bitter taste inhibit its consumption. In this study, the first hybrid rice-Tartary buckwheat (RTB) variety Mikuqiao18 (M18), bred by the pedigree selection of crossbreeding 'Miqiao' (MQ) with 'Jingqiaomai2' (JQ2), was selected for an agronomic and metabolomics analysis. Compared with JQ2, M18 demonstrated a significantly lower yield per plant owing to the decreased grain weight and similar full-filling grain number per plant. However, M18 had a similar kernel weight per plant because of the thinner shell. The sense organ test suggested that M18 had higher taste quality regardless of partial replacement of rice through the improvement of preponderant indicators related to cereal taste quality, including lower values of total protein, albumin, glutelin, globulin, pasting temperature, cool paste viscosity, and setback. Meanwhile, M18 contained high levels of flavonoids, including rutin and quercetin, but presented a positive summary appraisal of cooking with 25% rice. Additionally, 92 metabolites were positively identified by GC-MS, including 59 differentially expressed metabolites (DEMs) between M18 and JQ2. Typically, M18 exhibited lower levels of 20 amino acids and higher levels of 6 sugars and 4 polyols. These DEMs might partly explain the superior eating quality of M18. In addition, M18 was abundant in 4-aminobutyric acid, which is beneficial to human health. The current findings offer a theoretical foundation for breeding rice-Tartary buckwheat with high yield and quality and promoting the cultivation and consumption of rice-Tartary buckwheat as a daily functional cereal.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9283424PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-16001-zDOI Listing

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