Malnutrition is a complex issue with nutritional insecurity, health impairment and socio-economic concern amongst the less fortunate who depend on major staples for their dietary energy. Hunger and malnutrition (which includes both over-nutrition and under-nutrition) still affect billions of people globally despite all-time record high levels of food production. About half of the world’s population is iron deficient, while approximately one-third is known to be zinc deficient limiting endeavors to progress and prosper. Nutritional inequalities are quite evident in both the developed and developing worlds. Malnutrition is responsible for one in every five deaths globally. One of its plausible remedies is in realizing the potential of biofortified crops. As biofortification usually refers to producing staple foods whose edible portions are denser in bioavailable minerals and vitamins, these could revolutionize our efforts in rendering more people free from malnutrition.
Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) is the major staple providing the bulk of food calories (50%) and at least 30% of Fe and Zn intake and 20% dietary energy and protein consumption worldwide; thus it is essential to improve its nutritional quality. Biofortification circumvents these problems by improving the micronutrient content of the crops themselves by increasing mineral levels and bioavailability along with reduced antinutrient levels in the edible parts. Improving crop varieties by either conventional breeding or transgenic methods to obtain nutritionally enhanced crops has the advantage of making one time investment on research and development to have sustainable products. Foliar spray of zinc has shown significant increase of grain zinc content. Owing to sustainable and cost-effective nature, conventional and molecular breeding for micronutrient enrichment of wheat is still preferred over biotechnological approach. The grain Fe and Zn concentration is negatively and positively correlated with grain yield and high grain protein content, respectively. Micronutrients bioavailability in wheat and barley is further challenged by presence of several inhibitors/anti-nutrients such as phytic acid, fibers, lignins, tannins, oxalic acid, and lectins and promoters such as ascorbic acid, citric acid, fumaric acid, sulfur containing amino acids, short chain fatty acids and selenium. Amongst all, phytic acid is major concern that strongly chelates divalent cations such as Zn2+ and Fe2+. Bioavailability can be enhanced by lowering phytic acid in low-phytic-acid mutants or by transgenic expression of phytic acid-degrading enzyme, phytase, in the seeds.
This Research Topic therefore welcomes Original Research and Review articles exploring but not limited to the following areas:
1. Wheat biofortification : A potential weapon to address global malnutrition
2. Frontier/emerging areas of agronomic, microbiological, and molecular approaches of biofortification
3. Status and opportunities in potential utilization of genetic variability
4. Potential inhibitors of biofortification and bioavailability including anti-nutritional factors
5. Emerging areas/tools/technologies to enhance the mineral bioavailability
6. Impact assessment and economic imperatives of fortification over wheat biofortification
We would also like to acknowledge that Dr. Maria Ibba (The International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center, Mexico) acted as a Topic Coordinator and has contributed to the preparation of the proposal of this Research Topic.
Malnutrition is a complex issue with nutritional insecurity, health impairment and socio-economic concern amongst the less fortunate who depend on major staples for their dietary energy. Hunger and malnutrition (which includes both over-nutrition and under-nutrition) still affect billions of people globally despite all-time record high levels of food production. About half of the world’s population is iron deficient, while approximately one-third is known to be zinc deficient limiting endeavors to progress and prosper. Nutritional inequalities are quite evident in both the developed and developing worlds. Malnutrition is responsible for one in every five deaths globally. One of its plausible remedies is in realizing the potential of biofortified crops. As biofortification usually refers to producing staple foods whose edible portions are denser in bioavailable minerals and vitamins, these could revolutionize our efforts in rendering more people free from malnutrition.
Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) is the major staple providing the bulk of food calories (50%) and at least 30% of Fe and Zn intake and 20% dietary energy and protein consumption worldwide; thus it is essential to improve its nutritional quality. Biofortification circumvents these problems by improving the micronutrient content of the crops themselves by increasing mineral levels and bioavailability along with reduced antinutrient levels in the edible parts. Improving crop varieties by either conventional breeding or transgenic methods to obtain nutritionally enhanced crops has the advantage of making one time investment on research and development to have sustainable products. Foliar spray of zinc has shown significant increase of grain zinc content. Owing to sustainable and cost-effective nature, conventional and molecular breeding for micronutrient enrichment of wheat is still preferred over biotechnological approach. The grain Fe and Zn concentration is negatively and positively correlated with grain yield and high grain protein content, respectively. Micronutrients bioavailability in wheat and barley is further challenged by presence of several inhibitors/anti-nutrients such as phytic acid, fibers, lignins, tannins, oxalic acid, and lectins and promoters such as ascorbic acid, citric acid, fumaric acid, sulfur containing amino acids, short chain fatty acids and selenium. Amongst all, phytic acid is major concern that strongly chelates divalent cations such as Zn2+ and Fe2+. Bioavailability can be enhanced by lowering phytic acid in low-phytic-acid mutants or by transgenic expression of phytic acid-degrading enzyme, phytase, in the seeds.
This Research Topic therefore welcomes Original Research and Review articles exploring but not limited to the following areas:
1. Wheat biofortification : A potential weapon to address global malnutrition
2. Frontier/emerging areas of agronomic, microbiological, and molecular approaches of biofortification
3. Status and opportunities in potential utilization of genetic variability
4. Potential inhibitors of biofortification and bioavailability including anti-nutritional factors
5. Emerging areas/tools/technologies to enhance the mineral bioavailability
6. Impact assessment and economic imperatives of fortification over wheat biofortification
We would also like to acknowledge that Dr. Maria Ibba (The International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center, Mexico) acted as a Topic Coordinator and has contributed to the preparation of the proposal of this Research Topic.