Publication | Closed Access
Genotypic and Environmental Impact on Natural Variation of Nutrient Composition in 50 Non Genetically Modified Commercial Maize Hybrids in North America
28
Citations
31
References
2015
Year
NutritionNatural VariationGeneticsAgricultural EconomicsCrop ImprovementGenetically Modified CropsGrain QualityCrop VarietiesMaize ForageMaize HybridsGrain SciencePublic HealthEnvironmental ImpactQuantitative GeneticsMedicineCrop YieldAgricultural GeneticsGenetic VariationAgricultural BiotechnologyPlant BreedingCrop ProtectionCrop ScienceGenetic EngineeringSeed StorageNorth AmericaSeed Processing
This study was designed to assess natural variation in composition and metabolites in 50 genetically diverse non genetically modified maize hybrids grown at six locations in North America. Results showed that levels of compositional components in maize forage were affected by environment more than genotype. Crude protein, all amino acids except lysine, manganese, and β-carotene in maize grain were affected by environment more than genotype; however, most proximates and fibers, all fatty acids, lysine, most minerals, vitamins, and secondary metabolites in maize grain were affected by genotype more than environment. A strong interaction between genotype and environment was seen for some analytes. The results could be used as reference values for future nutrient composition studies of genetically modified crops and to expand conventional compositional data sets. These results may be further used as a genetic basis for improvement of the nutritional value of maize grain by molecular breeding and biotechnology approaches.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1