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  Project at University of Surrey: Filling the fibre gap: functional and metabolic potential of high amylose wheat


   School of Biosciences and Medicine

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  Dr D Robertson, Dr Martin Whyte, Dr Stella Lignou  No more applications being accepted  Competition Funded PhD Project (Students Worldwide)

About the Project

Project description:

Wheat is the most widely grown food crop and the most traded cereal in the world today. It is therefore a perfect foundation for raising the nutritional quality of the food supply to help improve overall health of communities worldwide. Selective breeding of commercial wheat has produces a variety which is very high in resistant starch, a type of dietary fibre which has documented beneficial metabolic effects for glucose and lipid metabolism. Dietary fibre is the nearest thing we have to a super-food with the known beneficial effects on the gut microbiome, gastrointestinal cancers and metabolic disease, but intakes fall well below recommended levels. The question is, can this new type of wheat can fill this fibre-gap?

This high-amylose wheat clearly has a great potential to improve human health if it enters the food chain, but at the moment there are several challenges which need to be overcome such as understanding how to incorporate this high insoluble-fibre wheat into food staples in the diet such as bread, biscuits and pastry, and further define the metabolic effects of consumption in humans.

Using a combination of cutting-edge food technology methods and dietary interventions in human volunteers, this project aims to investigate and maximise the incorporation of this wheat into different food products; evaluate the sensory qualities and consumer attitudes to this novel wheat variety and quantitate the glucose lowering effects of consumption in a dietary intervention trial.

Using a combination of cutting-edge food technology methods and dietary interventions in human volunteers, this project aims to investigate and maximise the incorporation of this wheat into different food products; evaluate the sensory qualities and consumer attitudes to this novel wheat variety and quantitate the glucose lowering effects of consumption in a dietary intervention trial.

Training opportunities:

There will be training opportunities in human-based research, laboratory food technology and sensory science at the Universities of Surrey and Reading. This project comes with the opportunity of undertaking a placement with Limagrain Cereales Ingredients (Europe) at their main site in Clemont Ferrand, France.

Student profile:

This project would be suitable for a student with a degree in food science and nutrition, with a keen interest in learning new laboratory and clinical techniques. We would expect the successful candidate to have already some laboratory food science experience.

Application Information

Full details on how to apply at https://research.reading.ac.uk/foodbiosystems/apply-for-a-foodbiosystems-phd/for-phd-students-2/

Application by online form only. Do not send CVs, they will not be looked at.


Agriculture (1) Biological Sciences (4) Food Sciences (15) Medicine (26)

Funding Notes

FoodBioSystems DTP studentships are predominantly open to students with established UK residency. Although international students (including EU countries) can apply, due to funding rules no more than 30% of the projects can be allocated to international students. The funding will include a tax free stipend and support for tuition fees at the standard UK rate (in 2021/2022 this is a minimum of £15,609 per year and £4500 per year respectively). There will also be a contribution towards research costs

References

Belobrajdic et al, High-Amylose Wheat Lowers the Postprandial Glycemic Response to Bread in Healthy Adults: A Randomized Controlled Crossover Trial, The Journal of Nutrition, 149, 8, Pages 1335–1345, https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/nxz067
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