Title Tartary Buckwheat in Human Nutrition.
Author Luthar, Zlata; Golob, Aleksandra; Germ, Mateja; Vombergar, Blanka; Kreft, Ivan
Journal Plants (Basel) Publication Year/Month 2021-Apr
PMID 33916396 PMCID PMC8066602
Affiliation + expend 1.Biotechnical Faculty, University of Ljubljana, SI-1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia.

Tartary buckwheat (Fagopyrum tataricum Gaertn.) originates in mountain areas of western China, and it is mainly cultivated in China, Bhutan, northern India, Nepal, and central Europe. Tartary buckwheat shows greater cold resistance than common buckwheat, and has traits for drought tolerance. Buckwheat can provide health benefits due to its contents of resistant starch, mineral elements, proteins, and in particular, phenolic substances, which prevent the effects of several chronic human diseases, including hypertension, obesity, cardiovascular diseases, and gallstone formation. The contents of the flavonoids rutin and quercetin are very variable among Tartary buckwheat samples from different origins and parts of the plants. Quercetin is formed after the degradation of rutin by the Tartary buckwheat enzyme rutinosidase, which mainly occurs after grain milling during mixing of the flour with water. High temperature treatments of wet Tartary buckwheat material prevent the conversion of rutin to quercetin.

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    National Institute of Pathogen Biology, CAMS & PUMC, Bejing, China
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