All Stories

  1. Low asparagine wheat: Europe’s first field trial of genome edited wheat amid rapidly changing regulations on acrylamide in food and genome editing of crops
  2. Transcriptomic and Metabolomic Analyses Reveal the Importance of Lipid Metabolism and Photosynthesis Regulation in High Salinity Tolerance in Barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) Leaves Derived from Mutagenesis Combined with Microspore Culture
  3. Reducing the Risk of Acrylamide and Other Processing Contaminant Formation in Wheat Products
  4. Accounting for environmental variation in the free asparagine content of wheat grain
  5. Real-Time Quantitative PCR: Primer Design, Reference Gene Selection, Calculations and Statistics
  6. Uncovering plant epigenetics: new insights into cytosine methylation in rye genomes
  7. Genetic Control of Wheat Amino Acids: QTL Mapping and Biofortification
  8. Field assessment of genome‐edited, low asparagine wheat: Europe's first CRISPR wheat field trial
  9. Reducing Dietary Acrylamide Exposure from Wheat Products through Crop Management and Imaging
  10. Genetic Diversity and Population Structure Analysis of Barley Landraces from Shanghai Region Using Genotyping-by-Sequencing
  11. Progress towards the production of potatoes and cereals with low acrylamide-forming potential
  12. Epigenetic switch reveals CRISPR /Cas9 response to cytosine methylation in plants
  13. Advances in Barley Breeding for Improving Nitrogen Use Efficiency
  14. Global wheat production could benefit from closing the genetic yield gap
  15. Phosphorylation of the alpha-subunit of plant eukaryotic initiation factor 2 prevents its association with polysomes but does not considerably suppress protein synthesis
  16. Understanding the Relationships between Free Asparagine in Grain and Other Traits to Breed Low-Asparagine Wheat
  17. Rapid Generation and Analysis of a Barley Doubled Haploid Line with Higher Nitrogen Use Efficiency Than Parental Lines by F1 Microspore Embryogenesis
  18. Reduced free asparagine in wheat grain resulting from a natural deletion of TaASN-B2: investigating and exploiting diversity in the asparagine synthetase gene family to improve wheat quality
  19. Genome-wide identification of sucrose nonfermenting-1-related protein kinase (SnRK) genes in barley and RNA-seq analyses of their expression in response to abscisic acid treatment
  20. Wheat with greatly reduced accumulation of free asparagine in the grain, produced by CRISPR/Cas9 editing of asparagine synthetase gene TaASN2
  21. Progress on reducing acrylamide levels in potato crisps in Europe, 2002 to 2019
  22. Vulnerability of European wheat to extreme heat and drought around flowering under future climate
  23. Cereal asparagine synthetase genes
  24. Stress, nutrients and genotype: understanding and managing asparagine accumulation in wheat grain
  25. Evidence That Phosphorylation of the α-Subunit of eIF2 Does Not Essentially Inhibit mRNA Translation in Wheat Germ Cell-Free System
  26. The Sulphur Response in Wheat Grain and Its Implications for Acrylamide Formation and Food Safety
  27. Novel low-nitrogen stress-responsive long non-coding RNAs (lncRNA) in barley landrace B968 (Liuzhutouzidamai) at seedling stage
  28. Research on the genetic control of flowering in potato set to blossom
  29. The wheat SnRK1α family and its contribution to Fusarium toxin tolerance
  30. Acrylamide in food: Progress in and prospects for genetic and agronomic solutions
  31. Contrasting gene expression patterns in grain of high and low asparagine wheat genotypes in response to sulphur supply
  32. Acrylamide: New European Risk Management Measures and Prospects for Reducing the Acrylamide-Forming Potential of Wheat
  33. Managing Acrylamide at the Agricultural Stage: Variety Selection, Crop Management, and the Prospects for Solving the Acrylamide Problem Through Plant Breeding and Biotechnology
  34. Reducing the Acrylamide-Forming Potential of Crop Plants
  35. Acrylamide in Food
  36. Legislation governing genetically modified and genome-edited crops in Europe: the need for change
  37. Reference gene selection for quantitative RT-PCR normalisation in barley under low-nitrogen stress, based on RNAseq data
  38. Construction of a network describing asparagine metabolism in plants and its application to the identification of genes affecting asparagine metabolism in wheat under drought and nutritional stress
  39. Crop Biotechnology
  40. Genomic, Biochemical, and Modeling Analyses of Asparagine Synthetases from Wheat
  41. Effects of variety, year of cultivation and sulphur supply on the accumulation of free asparagine in the grain of commercial wheat varieties
  42. Acrylamide levels in potato crisps in Europe from 2002 to 2016
  43. Acrylamide-forming potential of potatoes grown at different locations, and the ratio of free asparagine to reducing sugars at which free asparagine becomes a limiting factor for acrylamide formation
  44. Effects of Fungicide Treatment on Free Amino Acid Concentration and Acrylamide-Forming Potential in Wheat
  45. Genomic advancement: Aiming to affirm and improve human life
  46. Acrylamide and wheat
  47. Acrylamide and Rye
  48. Asparagine synthetase in wheat
  49. Reducing the Acrylamide-Forming Potential of Wheat, Rye and Potato: A Review
  50. Relationship between Alkylpyrazine and Acrylamide Formation in Potato Chips
  51. Acrylamide in cereals: the problem, and potential genetic and agronomic solutions.
  52. Acrylamide in potato crisps prepared from 20 UK-grown varieties: Effects of variety and tuber storage time
  53. Producing a road map that enables plants to cope with future climate change
  54. Effects of Water Availability on Free Amino Acids, Sugars, and Acrylamide-Forming Potential in Potato
  55. FRONT MATTER
  56. An Introduction to Bioenergy
  57. Effects of abiotic stress and crop management on cereal grain composition: implications for food quality and safety
  58. Cereal contaminants
  59. Safety assessment of genetically modified plants with deliberately altered composition
  60. Genetically Modified Plants
  61. Food security: the challenge of increasing wheat yield and the importance of not compromising food safety
  62. Evidence for the complex relationship between free amino acid and sugar concentrations and acrylamide‐forming potential in potato
  63. Photosynthetic assimilation of 14C into amino acids in potato (Solanum tuberosum) and asparagine in the tubers
  64. Acrylamide concentrations in potato crisps in Europe from 2002 to 2011
  65. Expression analysis of abscisic acid (ABA) and metabolic signalling factors in developing endosperm and embryo of barley
  66. Effects of Nitrogen and Sulfur Fertilization on Free Amino Acids, Sugars, and Acrylamide-Forming Potential in Potato
  67. Effects of variety and nutrient availability on the acrylamide-forming potential of rye grain
  68. Concentrations of Free Amino Acids and Sugars in Nine Potato Varieties: Effects of Storage and Relationship with Acrylamide Formation
  69. Toward two decades of plant biotechnology: successes, failures, and prospects
  70. The acrylamide problem: a plant and agronomic science issue
  71. Overexpression of GCN2-type protein kinase in wheat has profound effects on free amino acid concentration and gene expression
  72. Evidence that abscisic acid promotes degradation of SNF1-related protein kinase (SnRK) 1 in wheat and activation of a putative calcium-dependent SnRK2
  73. Genetically Modified Crops
  74. Energy Crops
  75. Energy Crops: Introduction
  76. Subject Index
  77. The sucrose non-fermenting-1-related (SnRK) family of protein kinases: potential for manipulation to improve stress tolerance and increase yield
  78. Sugars in crop plants
  79. Effects of sulphur nutrition during potato cultivation on the formation of acrylamide and aroma compounds during cooking
  80. Free Amino Acids and Sugars in Rye Grain: Implications for Acrylamide Formation
  81. Photosynthate Partitioning
  82. The Effects of Storage on the Formation of Aroma and Acrylamide in Heated Potato
  83. The interface between metabolic and stress signalling
  84. Sulphur nutrition differentially affects the distribution of asparagine in wheat grain
  85. New insights on the effects of heat stress on crops
  86. Preface
  87. Identifying target traits and molecular mechanisms for wheat breeding under a changing climate
  88. Snf1-related protein kinases (SnRKs) act within an intricate network that links metabolic and stress signalling in plants
  89. Effects of Genotype and Environment on Free Amino Acid Levels in Wheat Grain: Implications for Acrylamide Formation during Processing
  90. Arabidopsissucrose non-fermenting-1-related protein kinase-1 and calcium-dependent protein kinase phosphorylate conserved target sites in ABA response element binding proteins
  91. Reducing Acrylamide Precursors in Raw Materials Derived from Wheat and Potato
  92. Effects of Plant Sulfur Nutrition on Acrylamide and Aroma Compounds in Cooked Wheat
  93. GCN2-dependent phosphorylation of eukaryotic translation initiation factor-2α in Arabidopsis
  94. Genetic and agronomic approaches to decreasing acrylamide precursors in crop plants
  95. Changes in Free Amino Acids and Sugars in Potatoes Due to Sulfate Fertilization and the Effect on Acrylamide Formation
  96. DNA Sequences from Arabidopsis, Which Encode Protein Kinases and Function as Upstream Regulators of Snf1 in Yeast
  97. Asparagine in plants
  98. Formation of High Levels of Acrylamide during the Processing of Flour Derived from Sulfate-Deprived Wheat
  99. Kafirin structure and functionality
  100. Production of high-starch, low-glucose potatoes through over-expression of the metabolic regulator SnRK1
  101. Nutrient Sensing in Plant Meristems
  102. Comparison of Repetitive Sequences Derived from High Molecular Weight Subunits of Wheat Glutenin, an Elastomeric Plant Protein
  103. Enhanced seed phytosterol accumulation through expression of a modified HMG-CoA reductase
  104. Plant Biotechnology
  105. From Primitive Selection to Genetic Modification, Ten Thousand Years of Plant Breeding
  106. Risk Assessment, Regulation and Labeling
  107. Comparative analysis of the D genome-encoded high-molecular weight subunits of glutenin
  108. Evidence of diversity within theSnRK1bgene family ofHordeumspecies
  109. Molecular cloning of β-kafirin, a methionine-rich protein of sorghum grain
  110. Design, expression and characterisation of lysine-rich forms of the barley seed protein CI-2
  111. Regulation of Carbon and Amino Acid Metabolism: Roles of Sucrose Nonfermenting‐1‐Related Protein Kinase‐1 and General Control Nonderepressible‐2‐Related Protein Kinase
  112. Changes in Protein Secondary Structure during Gluten Deformation Studied by Dynamic Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy
  113. Prospects for genetically modified crops
  114. SNF1-related protein kinase (SnRK1) phosphorylates class I heat shock protein
  115. Highly conserved protein kinases involved in the regulation of carbon and amino acid metabolism
  116. Carbon metabolite sensing and signalling
  117. The Arabidopsis 14-3-3 protein, GF14?, binds to the Schizosaccharomyces pombe Cdc25 phosphatase and rescues checkpoint defects in the rad24? mutant
  118. Plant Biotechnology: The Genetic Manipulation of Plants
  119. Gluten, the Elastomeric Protein of Wheat Seeds
  120. Molecular cloning of an arabidopsis homologue of GCN2, a protein kinase involved in co-ordinated response to amino acid starvation
  121. Evidence that SNF1-related kinase and hexokinase are involved in separate sugar-signalling pathways modulating post-translational redox activation of ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase in potato tubers
  122. The Arabidopsis CDPK-SnRK Superfamily of Protein Kinases
  123. Expression of the gamma-zein protein of maize in seeds of transgenic barley: effects on grain composition and properties
  124. Antisense SNF1-related (SnRK1) protein kinase gene represses transient activity of an alpha-amylase (alpha-Amy2) gene promoter in cultured wheat embryos
  125. Sequence and properties of HMW subunit 1Bx20 from pasta wheat (Triticum durum) which is associated with poor end use properties
  126. Metabolic signalling and carbon partitioning: role of Snf1-related (SnRK1) protein kinase
  127. Starch: the need for improved quality or quantity--an overview
  128. Genetically Modified Crops
  129. Genetics of Wheat Gluten Proteins
  130. The high molecular weight subunits of wheat glutenin and their role in determining wheat processing properties
  131. Preface
  132. Molecular structures and interactions of repetitive peptides based on wheat glutenin subunits depend on chain length
  133. Cereal seed storage proteins: structures, properties and role in grain utilization
  134. Isolation and characterization of five novel high molecular weight subunit of glutenin genes from Triticum timopheevi and Aegilops cylindrica
  135. The structure and properties of gluten: an elastic protein from wheat grain
  136. Expression of antisense SnRK1 protein kinase sequence causes abnormal pollen development and male sterility in transgenic barley
  137. Genetic modification and plant food allergens: risks and benefits
  138. Synthesis, expression and characterisation of peptides comprised of perfect repeat motifs based on a wheat seed storage protein
  139. The Biochemistry and Molecular Biology of Seed Storage Proteins
  140. Metabolic signalling and the partitioning of resources in plant storage organs
  141. Regulation of spinach SNF1-related (SnRK1) kinases by protein kinases and phosphatases is associated with phosphorylation of the T loop and is regulated by 5'-AMP
  142. Reply…The sugar sensing story
  143. Is hexokinase really a sugar sensor in plants?
  144. The Prolamins of the Triticeae
  145. Antisense expression of a sucrose non-fermenting-1-related protein kinase sequence in potato results in decreased expression of sucrose synthase in tubers and loss of sucrose-inducibility of sucrose synthase transcripts in leaves
  146. Immunological evidence that HMG-CoA reductase kinase-A is the cauliflower homologue of the RKIN1 subfamily of plant protein kinases
  147. Differential expression of two barley SNF1-related protein kinase genes
  148. Structure, Assembly and Targeting of Wheat Storage Proteins
  149. The plant cell cycle
  150. pSnf1
  151. Roles of the Snf1/Rkin1/AMP-activated protein kinase family in the response to environmental and nutritional stress
  152. A β-Turn Rich Barley Seed Protein Is Correctly Folded in Escherichia coli
  153. Opportunities for manipulating the seed protein composition of wheat and barley in order to improve quality
  154. Plant Genes Encoding Homologues of the SNF1 and Shaggy Protein Kinases
  155. Tobacco plants transformed with cdc25, a mitotic inducer gene from fission yeast
  156. Molecular characterization of cell populations in the maize root apex
  157. Structure and expression of a gene from Arabidopsis thaliana encoding a protein related to SNF1 protein kinase
  158. Molecular analyses of a barley multigene family homologous to the yeast protein kinase geneSNF1
  159. Identification of a novel β-turn-rich repeat motif in the D hordeins of barley
  160. Molecular cloning of a novel barley seed protein gene that is repressed by abscisic acid
  161. Analysis of HMW glutenin subunits encoded by chromosome 1A of bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) indicates quantitative effects on grain quality
  162. Isolation and characterisation of genes encoding rye prolamins containing a highly repetitive sequence motif
  163. Complementation of snf1, a mutation affecting global regulation of carbon metabolism in yeast, by a plant protein kinase cDNA.
  164. The Prolamins of the Triticeae (Barley, Wheat and Rye): Structure, Synthesis and Deposition
  165. Stopped Flow Kinetics of the Co2+-Activated Cyanobacterial RubisCO
  166. Nucleotide sequences of the two high-molecular-weight glutenin genes from the D-genome of a hexaploid bread wheat, Triticum aestivum L. cv Cheyenne
  167. Functional analysis of the upstream regions of a silent and an expressed member of a family of wheat seed protein genes in transgenic tobacco
  168. Molecular cloning of the barley seed protein CMd: A variant member of the α-amylase/trypsin inhibitor family of cereals
  169. The nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences of an HMW glutenin subunit gene from chromosome 1B of bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and comparison with those of genes from chromosomes 1A and 1D
  170. The nucleotide sequence of a HMW glutenin subunit gene located on chromosome 1A of wheat (Triticum aestivumL.)
  171. Plant Biotechnology: Transgenic Crops
  172. The Structure and Expression of Cereal Storage Protein Genes