Toshikazu Kuranouchi
National Agriculture and Food Research Organization
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Featured researches published by Toshikazu Kuranouchi.
Breeding Science | 2015
Kenji Katayama; Seiji Tamiya; Tetsufumi Sakai; Yumi Kai; Akiko Ohara-Takada; Toshikazu Kuranouchi; Masaru Yoshinaga
Sweetpotato (Ipomoea batatas (L.) Lam.), which is an outcrossing hexaploid, is one of the most important starch-producing crops in the world. During the last decade, new sweetpotato cultivars, e.g. ‘Quick Sweet’, which have approximately 20°C lower pasting temperature, slower retrogradation and higher digestibility of raw starch than ordinary cultivars, have been developed in Japan. Genetic analysis of these variants with low pasting temperature starch was conducted in this study. Using 8 variants and 15 normal clones, 26 families were generated. The results from analyzing these progenies suggested that this trait is a qualitative character controlled by one recessive allele (designated spt), which is inherited in a hexasomic manner. A dosage effect of the wild-type Spt allele was found for starch pasting temperature, although the effect was not linear. These results will aid breeders to develop sweetpotato cultivars with a range of starch pasting temperatures.
Breeding Science | 2017
Yoshihiro Okada; Hiroaki Tabuchi; Toshikazu Kuranouchi
Sweetpotato (Ipomoeae batatas (L.) Lam.) is an important food crop affected by several pests throughout the world, especially in tropical, subtropical, and temperate regions. Although Japan is relatively free from many serious sweetpotato pests, some pests, especially soil-borne pathogens, viruses, and insects such as plant-parasitic nematodes and weevils, cause severe damage in Japan. In this review, we describe the current status and management options for sweetpotato pests and diseases in Japan and review research related to sweetpotato breeding that can promote resistance to these problems. Furthermore, we describe methods to evaluate resistance to pests and disease used in sweetpotato breeding at the National Agriculture and Food Research Organization (NARO).
Breeding Science | 2017
Kenji Katayama; Tetsufumi Sakai; Toshikazu Kuranouchi; Yumi Kai
Sweetpotato (Ipomoea batatas (L.) Lam.) is an outcrossing hexaploid that is cultivated in the tropics and warm-temperate regions of the world. Sweetpotato has played an important role as a famine-relief crop during its long history and has recently been reevaluated as a health-promoting food. In Japan, sweetpotato is used for a wide range of applications, such as table use, processed foods, and alcohol and starch production, and two groups at National Agriculture Research Organization (NARO) undertake the breeding of cultivars for these applications. Sweetpotato breeders utilize breeding processes such as grafting for flower induction and the identification of incompatibility groups before crossing to conquer problems peculiar to sweetpotato. For table use, new cultivars with high sugar content were released recently and have become popular among Japanese consumers. New cultivars with high anthocyanin or β-carotene content were released for processed foods and use as colorants. As raw materials, new cultivars with high alcohol yield were released for the production of shochu spirits. In addition, new cultivars with high starch yield and a cultivar containing starch with excellent cold-storage ability were released for starch production. This review deals with recent progress in sweetpotato breeding and cultivars for diverse applications in Japan.
Breeding Science | 2016
Toshikazu Kuranouchi; Tadashi Kumazaki; Toru Kumagai; Makoto Nakatani
Few sweetpotato (Ipomoea batatas Lam.) cultivars with erect plant type are available despite their advantages over spreading type, such as simplicity of cultivation and ability to adapt to limited space. One of the reasons is insufficiency of their agronomic characteristics for table use. So, it is important to overcome these drawbacks of ER-type lines. We attempted to breed new erect plant type sweetpotato lines having good agronomic traits using cross breeding and mutation breeding with gamma-ray irradiation. With cross breeding we successfully developed new erect plant type lines with almost equal levels of yield as compared to ‘Beniazuma’, one of the leading cultivars in Japan. However, mutation breeding failed to develop any promising lines because we could not obtain distinct erect plant type lines. In the future larger numbers of plants should be used for mutation breeding, and irradiation methods should be improved.
Journal of The Japanese Society for Food Science and Technology-nippon Shokuhin Kagaku Kogaku Kaishi | 2014
Yoshiyuki Nakamura; Toshikazu Kuranouchi; Akiko Ohara-Takada; Kenji Katayama
Journal of The Japanese Society for Food Science and Technology-nippon Shokuhin Kagaku Kogaku Kaishi | 2015
Yoshiyuki Nakamura; Akiko Ohara-Takada; Toshikazu Kuranouchi; Kenji Katayama
Japan Agricultural Research Quarterly: JARQ | 2018
Yoshiyuki Nakamura; Toshikazu Kuranouchi; Akiko Ohara-Takada; Ryoichi Masuda; Toru Kumagai; Kenji Katayama
Breeding Research | 2014
Toshikazu Kuranouchi; Akiko Takada; Yoshiyuki Nakamura; Seiji Tamiya; Makoto Nakatani; Toru Kumagai; Kenji Katayama
Breeding Research | 2013
Toshikazu Kuranouchi; Yoji Momota; Akiko Takada; Yoshiyuki Nakamura; Toru Kumagai; Makoto Nakatani
Breeding Research | 2002
Makoto Nakatani; Toshikazu Kuranouchi; Seiji Tamiya; M Ohtsubo; Katsumi Komaki