Abstract

Biofortification through genetic manipulation is the best approach for improving micronutrient content of the staple food crops to alleviate hidden hunger, namely, the deficiency of Fe and Zn affecting more than two billion people worldwide. An interspecific hybridization was made between T. aestivum line Chinese Spring (CS) and Aegilops kotschyi accession 3790 selected for high grain iron and zinc concentration. The CS x Ae. kotschyi F(1) hybrid with low chromosome pairing was highly male and female sterile. This was backcrossed with wheat cultivars to get seed set. The selfed BC(1)F(1) and BC(2)F(1) plants with high grain iron and zinc concentration were selected in subsequent generations. The selected derivatives showed 60-136% enhanced grain iron and zinc concentration and 50-120% increased iron and zinc content per seed as compared to the recipient wheat cultivars. Thirteen cytologically stable, fertile and agronomically superior plants with high grain iron and zinc concentrations were selected for molecular characterization. The application of anchored wheat SSR markers, transferable to Ae. kotschyi, to the high grain iron and zinc containing derivatives indicated introgression of group 2 and group 7 chromosomes of Ae. kotschyi. GISH and FISH analysis of some derivatives confirmed the substitution of chromosomes 2S and 7U for their homoeologues of the A genome, suggesting that some of the genes controlling high grain micronutrient content in the Ae. kotschyi accession are on these chromosomes.

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