| Literature DB >> 25976994 |
Thomas Van Hecke1, Els Vossen1, Lieselot Y Hemeryck2, Julie Vanden Bussche2, Lynn Vanhaecke2, Stefaan De Smet3.
Abstract
Uncured and nitrite-cured pork were subjected, raw, cooked (65 °C, 15 min) or overcooked (90 °C, 30 min), to an in vitro digestion model, which includes mouth, stomach, duodenum, and colon phases. Heating of uncured meat resulted in a pronounced increase in lipid and protein oxidation products throughout digestion. Nitrite-curing had an antioxidant effect during digestion, but this effect disappeared when the meat was overcooked, resulting in up to ninefold higher 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal concentrations compared with digested nitrite-cured raw and cooked pork. Colonic digesta contained significantly higher concentrations of the NOC-specific DNA adduct O(6)-carboxy-methylguanine when pork underwent a more intense heating procedure, independent of nitrite-curing, depending strongly on the fecal inoculum used. Since processed meats are usually nitrite-cured, the present study suggests that overcooking processed meat is likely to result in the formation of genotoxic compounds during digestion and should, therefore, be avoided.Entities:
Keywords: Health; Lipid and protein oxidation; N-Nitroso-compounds; Nitrite; Processed meat
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25976994 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2015.04.029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514