| Literature DB >> 28500964 |
Jiang Jiang1, Xinyue Tang1, Yan Xue2, Gang Lin2, Youling L Xiong3.
Abstract
Cross-bred pigs were fed a control diet (with 0.3ppm sodium selenite and 1.5% soybean oil) or organic selenium diets (0.3ppm Se-Yeast with 1.5% soybean or linseed oil) to investigate nutrient supplement effects on meat quality and oxidative stability. The organic selenium diets increased muscular selenium content up to 54%, and linseed oil increased n-3 fatty acids two-fold while lowering the n-6/n-3 fatty acid ratio from 13.9 to 5.9 over the selenite control diet (P<0.05). Organic selenium yeast treatments with linseed oil reduced pork drip loss by 58-74% when compared with diets with soybean oil. Lightness of fresh pork was slightly less for organic selenium groups than inorganic (P<0.05), but redness was mostly similar. Lipid oxidation (TBARS) and protein oxidation (sulfhydryl) during meat storage (4°C up to 6days) showed no appreciable difference (P>0.05) between diets, in agreement with the lack of notable difference in endogenous antioxidant enzyme activity between these meat groups.Entities:
Keywords: Antioxidant enzymes; N-3 fatty acids; Nutrition; Pork; Selenium
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28500964 DOI: 10.1016/j.meatsci.2017.03.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Meat Sci ISSN: 0309-1740 Impact factor: 5.209