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Research article2025Peer reviewedOpen access

Polymeric Gluten Proteins as Climate-Resilient Markers of Quality: Can LC-MS/MS Provide Valuable Information about Spring Wheat Grown in Diverse Climates?

Lama, Sbatie; Muneer, Faraz; America, Antoine H. P.; Kuktaite, Ramune

Abstract

In this study, the impact of the varying environments, wet-cool (2017), dry-hot (2018), and fluctuating (2019), on two spring wheat genotypes, Diskett and Bumble, grown in field conditions in southern Sweden was studied. From harvested grains, polymeric gluten proteins were fractionated and collected using SE-HPLC and then analyzed with LC-MS/MS. Proteins and peptides identified through searches against the protein sequences ofTriticum aestivum (taxon 4565) from the UniProtKB database showed 7 high molecular weight glutenin subunits (HMW-GS) and 24 low molecular weight glutenin subunits (LMW-GS) with different enrichment levels for both genotypes. Glu-B1 for HMW-GS and Glu D3 and m- and s-types for LMW-GS were dominated in both genotypes, and a small proportion of alpha-, gamma-, and omega-gliadins were also present. A minor variation in HMW-GS and LMW-GS compositions was observed between the years, while small amounts of heat shock proteins were identified under the "dry-hot" period for Diskett. In conclusion, Diskett showed more stable and climate-resistant protein patterns in the studied varying climate as compared to Bumble. The study highlights the use of proteomics and LC-MS/MS for differentiation of wheat genotypes, although it shows low sensitivity in measuring the diverse environment impact on the polymeric proteins.

Keywords

gluten polymer; spring wheat; glutenins; gliadins; severe climate impact

Published in

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
2025, volume: 73, number: 3, pages: 1844 - 1854
Publisher: AMER CHEMICAL SOC

SLU Authors

UKÄ Subject classification

Agricultural Science

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jafc.4c10789

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/140319