L
Laura Gazza
Researcher at Canadian Real Estate Association
Publications - 46
Citations - 1235
Laura Gazza is an academic researcher from Canadian Real Estate Association. The author has contributed to research in topics: Common wheat & Gluten. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 40 publications receiving 940 citations. Previous affiliations of Laura Gazza include Consiglio per la ricerca e la sperimentazione in agricoltura.
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The Peach v2.0 release: high-resolution linkage mapping and deep resequencing improve chromosome-scale assembly and contiguity.
Ignazio Verde,Jerry Jenkins,Luca Dondini,Sabrina Micali,Giulia Pagliarani,Elisa Vendramin,Roberta Paris,Roberta Paris,Valeria Aramini,Laura Gazza,Laura Rossini,Laura Rossini,Daniele Bassi,Michela Troggio,Shengqiang Shu,Jane Grimwood,Stefano Tartarini,Maria Teresa Dettori,Jeremy Schmutz +18 more
TL;DR: The improved high quality peach genome assembly (Peach v2.0) represents a valuable tool for the analysis of the genetic diversity, domestication, and as a vehicle for genetic improvement of peach and related Prunus species.
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A unique mutation in a MYB gene cosegregates with the nectarine phenotype in peach.
Elisa Vendramin,G. Pea,Luca Dondini,Igor Pacheco,Maria Teresa Dettori,Laura Gazza,Simone Scalabrin,Francesco Strozzi,Stefano Tartarini,Daniele Bassi,Ignazio Verde,Laura Rossini +11 more
TL;DR: Analysis of genomic re-sequencing data from five peach/nectarine accessions pointed to the insertion of a LTR retroelement in exon 3 of the PpeMYB25 gene as the cause of the recessive glabrous phenotype, indicating that a unique mutational event gave rise to the nectarine trait.
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Upcycling of brewers’ spent grain by production of dry pasta with higher nutritional potential
TL;DR: In this article, the major byproduct of the brewing industry, the barley spent grain (BSG), was used to enrich semolina to develop dry pasta with an increased potential nutritional value.
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Environmental factors of celiac disease: cytotoxicity of hulled wheat species Triticum monococcum, T. turgidum ssp. dicoccum and T. aestivum ssp. spelta.
Olimpia Vincentini,Francesca Maialetti,Laura Gazza,Marco Silano,Mariarita Dessì,Massimo De Vincenzi,Norberto Pogna +6 more
TL;DR: Investigating if species from ancient wheat could be considered as healthy food crops devoid or poor in cytotoxic prolamines for celiac disease found three cereals with a different genome to be toxic.
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Evaluation of leaf rust resistance genes Lr1, Lr9, Lr24, Lr47 and their introgression into common wheat cultivars by marker-assisted selection
TL;DR: Epidemiological field controls in different Italian locations and seedling evaluations of the ‘Thatcher’ near-isogenic lines (NILs) carrying the leaf rust resistance genes Lr1, Lr9, LR24 and Lr47 confirmed their effectiveness in both field and greenhouse conditions.