Enhancing Wheat Quality and Nutritional Value: Insights into Genetic Basis, Biotechnological Tools, and Environmental Influences

Authors

  • Saima Majeed Government College University Faisalabad. *Corresponding Author: saimamajeed653@gmail.com Author
  • Sana Afzal Department of Plant Breeding and Genetics, University of Agriculture Faisalabad. sanafzal437@gmail.com Author
  • Azka Muneer Department of Plant Breeding and Genetics, Faculty of Agriculture, University of Agriculture, Faisalabad. azkamuneer96@gmail.com Author
  • Faiqa Abid Department of Agronomy, Islamia University Bahawalpur. faiqaabid761@gmail.com Author
  • Mohammad Ilyas Department of Botany, Abdul Wali Khan University Mardan. ilyas.uop014@gmail.com Author
  • Abdul Latif Khan Tipu Economic Botany Section, Regional Agricultural Research Institute Bahawalpur. gtipu117@gmail.com Author
  • Khatir Ali Department of Plant Breeding and Genetics, University of Agriculture Faisalabad. khatirali34521@gmail.com Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63163/jpehss.v4i1.1068

Abstract

Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) is a critical global staple, providing ~19% of caloric intake and ~21% of protein needs, yet modern cultivars often suffer from reduced micronutrient density due to yield-focused breeding. This review synthesizes the genetic architecture of wheat quality traits, including seed storage proteins (glutenins and gliadins), key loci such as Gpc-B1 (NAM-B1) for enhanced grain protein content (GPC), iron, and zinc remobilization, and genes governing grain hardness and starch quality. Biotechnological advances, particularly CRISPR/Cas9 multiplexing for reducing gluten allergenicity, increasing resistant starch, and knocking out negative regulators like TaGW2 for improved yield-quality synergy, are highlighted alongside RNA interference and marker-assisted/genomic selection strategies. Multi-omics integration reveals spatiotemporal dynamics during grain development, while environmental factors nitrogen-sulfur balance, foliar biofortification, and climate stressors like elevated CO₂, heat, and drought significantly influence nutritional and processing quality. Genotype-by-environment interactions are addressed through stability models (AMMI and GGE biplots). Regulatory landscapes vary globally, with emerging flexibility for gene-edited products. Integrated approaches combining genetics, biotechnology, agronomy, and supportive policies hold promise for developing nutritionally superior, resilient wheat cultivars to combat hidden hunger and ensure food security.

Downloads

Published

2026-02-20