Literature DB >> 22061084

Genotype with nutrition interaction on fatty acid composition of intramuscular fat and the relationship with flavour of pig meat.

N D Cameron1, M Enser, G R Nute, F M Whittington, J C Penman, A C Fisken, A M Perry, J D Wood.   

Abstract

The effects of genotype, diet and the genotype with diet interaction on fatty acid composition of neutral lipid and phospholipid of intramuscular fat in pigs were examined. Pigs from four selection lines and a control line were fed isoenergetic diets, which differed in ileal digestible lysine:digestible energy (A: 0.40, C: 0.76 and E: 1.12 g lysine/MJ DE). The selected lines resulted from seven generations of selection for high daily food intake (DFI), lean food conversion ratio (LFC) and lean growth rate on ad-libitum (LGA) or restricted feeding regimes in a Large White population. During performance test, from 30 to 90 kg, pigs were fed on either ad-libitum or restricted (0.75 g/g ad-libitum daily food intake) feeding regimes. A trained sensory panel assessed intensities of pork flavour and abnormal flavour and the hedonic characteristics of flavour liking and overall acceptability. The proportion of neutral lipid in the LGA line was lower (0.64 v 0.75, s.e.d. 0.03) while the polyunsaturated:saturated (P:S) ratio of the LFC line (0.53 v 0.41, s.e.d. 0.05) was higher than the control line and other selection lines. The DFI line had a higher phospholipid n-6:n-3 ratio than other selection lines (14 v 11, s.e.d. 1.0). Diets C and E resulted in lower neutral lipid:phospholipid ratio (0.7 v 0.8, s.e.d. 0.01), n-6:n-3 ratios for both neutral lipid (5 v 13, s.e.d. 0.8) and phospholipids (7 v 20, s.e.d. 0.6) and a higher P:S ratio (0.5 v 0.3, s.e.d. 0.03) for neutral lipid than diet A. Neutral lipid fatty acids C18:2 n-6, C18:3 n-3, C20:3 n-6, C20:4 n-6, C20:5 n-3, C22:5 n-3 and C22:6 n-3 were negatively correlated with pork flavour (-0.30, s.e.d. 0.10), flavour liking (-0.33) and overall acceptability (-0.30). In contrast, the fatty acids C16:1, C18:1 ω9 and C18:1 ω11 were positively correlated with pork flavour (0.36), flavour liking (0.39) and overall acceptability (0.40). However, correlations for fatty acids in the phospholipid class were positive for C18:2 n-6, C20:4 n-6 and C22:4 n-6 with pork flavour (0.33), flavour liking (0.23) and overall acceptability (0.23). The proportion of neutral lipid had non-significant correlations with flavour traits; pork flavour (0.01), abnormal flavour (0.08), flavour liking (-0.03) and overall acceptability (0.03). The selection lines responded in a similar manner to the different diets, such that there was little evidence for genotype with nutrition interactions for fatty acid concentrations of neutral lipids and phospholipids. Selection for high lean growth will reduce intramuscular fat, but the increased relative amount of phospholipid and concentration of polyunsaturated fatty acids are unlikely to reduce eating quality. Nutritional effects on intramuscular fat characteristics were greater than genetic effects, such that nutritional approaches to feeding pigs will provide effective methods of reducing the n-6:n-3 fatty acid ratio of human dietary fat from pigmeat and improving human health.

Entities:  

Year:  2000        PMID: 22061084     DOI: 10.1016/s0309-1740(99)00142-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Meat Sci        ISSN: 0309-1740            Impact factor:   5.209


  31 in total

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Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2021-04-21       Impact factor: 2.752

5.  The Effect of Replacement of Soybean Meal with Corn Dried Distillers Grains with Solubles (cDDGS) and Differentiation of Dietary Fat Sources on Pig Meat Quality and Fatty Acid Profile.

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6.  Effect of diacylglycerol acyltransferase 2 overexpression in 3T3-L1 is associated to an increase in mono-unsaturated fatty acid accumulation.

Authors:  Zhiqi Zhang; Gang Shu; Xiaotong Zhu; Junming Guo; Han Cai; Songbo Wang; Lina Wang; Ping Gao; Qianyun Xi; Yongliang Zhang; Li Yuan; Qingyan Jiang
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7.  Dietary L-arginine supplementation affects the skeletal longissimus muscle proteome in finishing pigs.

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8.  Effect of fermented biogas residue on growth performance, serum biochemical parameters, and meat quality in pigs.

Authors:  Xiang Xu; Lv-Mu Li; Bin Li; Wen-Jie Guo; Xiao-Ling Ding; Fa-Zhi Xu
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9.  Fatty acid and transcriptome profiling of longissimus dorsi muscles between pig breeds differing in meat quality.

Authors:  Kaifan Yu; Gang Shu; Fangfang Yuan; Xiaotong Zhu; Ping Gao; Songbo Wang; Lina Wang; Qianyun Xi; Shouquan Zhang; Yongliang Zhang; Yan Li; Tongshan Wu; Li Yuan; Qingyan Jiang
Journal:  Int J Biol Sci       Date:  2013-01-07       Impact factor: 6.580

10.  Genome-Wide Association Study Singles Out SCD and LEPR as the Two Main Loci Influencing Intramuscular Fat Content and Fatty Acid Composition in Duroc Pigs.

Authors:  Roger Ros-Freixedes; Sofia Gol; Ramona N Pena; Marc Tor; Noelia Ibáñez-Escriche; Jack C M Dekkers; Joan Estany
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-03-29       Impact factor: 3.240

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