“…Owing to the involvement of gliadins in multiple types of wheat sensitivities, substantial efforts have been devoted to the development of low-gliadin wheat through various approaches, i.e. silencing gliadin gene expression by RNA interference (RNAi), preparation of mutants lacking one or more gliadin species (loci) and CRISPR/Cas9mediated genome editing of multiple gliadin genes (Gil-Humanes et al, 2010, 2014aBecker et al, 2012;Altenbach et al, 2014;S anchez-Le on et al, 2018;Wang et al, 2017a). The resultant lines showed reduced levels of CD or WDEIA epitopes; some of them also exhibited improved end-use quality owing to an elevated glutenin/ gliadin (Glu/Gli) ratio (Gil-Humanes et al, 2010, 2014aBecker et al, 2012;Altenbach et al, 2014), which is vital for promoting gluten and dough functionalities by forming more functional GMPs (Wrigley et al, 2009;MacRitchie, 2014;Rasheed et al, 2014).…”