Journal: Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
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Abbreviation
J. Agric. Food Chem.
Publisher
American Chemical Society
76 results
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Publications 1 - 10 of 76
- Characterization of Rapeseed (Brassica napus) Oils by Bulk C, O, H, and Fatty Acid C Stable Isotope AnalysesItem type: Journal Article
Journal of Agricultural and Food ChemistryRichter, Eva Katharina; Spangenberg, Jorge E.; Kreuzer, Michael; et al. (2010) - Assessing the Phytoavailability of Dieldrin Residues in Charcoal-Amended Soil Using Tenax ExtractionItem type: Journal Article
Journal of Agricultural and Food ChemistryHilber, Isabel; Bucheli, Thomas D.; Wyss, Gabriela S.; et al. (2009) - Grain zinc, iron, and copper concentrations of wheat grown in Central Iran and their relationships with soil and climate variablesItem type: Journal Article
Journal of Agricultural and Food ChemistryKarami, Mahin; Afyuni, Majid; Khoshgoftarmanesh, Amir H.; et al. (2009) - Composition of Aldrin, Dieldrin, and Photodieldrin Enantiomers in Technical and Environmental SamplesItem type: Journal Article
Journal of Agricultural and Food ChemistryBuser, Hans-Rudolf; Mueller, Markus D.; Buerge, Ignaz J.; et al. (2009) - Isotope Tracing Reveals Differential Allocation of Cadmium and Zinc within the Grain of Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)Item type: Journal Article
Journal of Agricultural and Food ChemistryYan , Bo-Fang; Wiggenhauser, Matthias; Zhao , Man; et al. (2025)Understanding how toxic cadmium (Cd) and essential zinc (Zn) are differentially allocated within wheat grains is critical for food safety and biofortification. Enriched111Cd and67Zn isotopes were introduced in wheat via rachis injection to reveal tissue-specific allocation patterns through complementary pulse-chase and long-term tracing experiments across grain development stages. The crease served as a key barrier for both elements but was incompletely developed around 10 days after anthesis, allowing both elements to readily enter the endosperm. The crease also acted as a regulatory hub, preferentially allocating Cd to the periphery and Zn to the endosperm. During grain development, Cd remobilization was restricted within maternal (crease to periphery) or filial (endosperm to embryo) tissues, whereas Zn was remobilized from maternal to filial tissues. These findings identify grain maternal tissues as irreversible Cd sinks but Zn sources for the endosperm and highlight early grain filling as the optimal timing for reducing Cd accumulation while enhancing Zn biofortification. - Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy and Raman Spectroscopy as Tools for Identification of Steryl FerulatesItem type: Journal Article
Journal of Agricultural and Food ChemistryMandak, Eszter; Zhu, Dan; Godany, Tamas A.; et al. (2013) - Potential of acrylamide formation, sugars, and free asparagine in potatoesItem type: Journal Article
Journal of Agricultural and Food ChemistryAmrein, Thomas M.; Bachmann, Sandra; Noti, Anja; et al. (2003) - Physiological and metabolic properties of a digestion-resistant maltodextrin, classified as type 3 retrograded resistant starchItem type: Journal Article
Journal of Agricultural and Food ChemistryBrouns, Fred; Arrigoni, Eva; Langkilde, Anna Maria; et al. (2006) - Drought Effects on Proanthocyanidins in Sainfoin (Onobrychis viciifolia Scop.) Are Dependent on the Plant's Ontogenetic StageItem type: Journal Article
Journal of Agricultural and Food ChemistryMalisch, Carsten S.; Salminen, Juha-Pekka; Kölliker, Roland; et al. (2016) - Changes in volatile emissions from apple trees and associated response of adult female codling moths over the fruit-growing seasonItem type: Journal Article
Journal of Agricultural and Food ChemistryVallat, Armelle; Dorn, Silvia (2005)
Publications 1 - 10 of 76