1. Healthy values and de novo domestication of sand rice (Agriophyllum squarrosum), a comparative view against Chenopodium quinoa.
- Author
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Pengshan Zhao, Xiaofeng Li, Hong Sun, Xin Zhao, Xiaohua Wang, Ruilan Ran, Jiecai Zhao, Yuming Wei, Xin Liu, and Guoxiong Chen
- Subjects
QUINOA ,RICE ,CHEMICAL mutagenesis ,ESSENTIAL amino acids ,UNSATURATED fatty acids ,SAND - Abstract
Sand rice (Agriophyllum squarrosum) is prized for its well-balanced nutritional properties, broad adaptability in Central Asia and highly therapeutic potentials. it has been considered as a potential climate-resilient crop. its seed has comparable metabolite profile with Chenopodium quinoa and is rich in proteins, essential amino acids, minerals, polyunsaturated fatty acids, and phenolics, but low in carbohydrates. Phenolics like protocatechuic acid and quercetins have been characterized with biological functions on regulation of lipid and glucose metabolism in addition to anti-inflammatory and antioxidant activities. Sand rice is thus an important source for developing functional and nutraceutical products. Though historical consumption has been over 1300 years, sand rice has undergone few agronomic improvements until recently. Breeding by individual selection has been performed and yield of the best genotype can reach up to 1295.5 kg/ha. Furthermore, chemical mutagenesis has been used to modify the undesirable traits and a case study of a dwarf line (dwarf1), which showed the Green Revolution-like phenotypes, is presented. Utilization of both breeding methodologies will accelerate its domestication process. As a novel crop, sand rice research is rather limited compared with quinoa. More scientific input is urgently required if the nutritional and commercial potentials are to be fully realized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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