| Literature DB >> 33120178 |
Nara Regina Brandão Cônsolo1, Alessandra Fernandes Rosa2, Luis Carlos Garibaldi Simon Barbosa3, Paul Haydon Maclean4, Angel Higuera-Padilla5, Luiz Alberto Colnago6, Evaldo Antonio Lencioni Titto7.
Abstract
The aim of this preliminary study was to evaluate meat quality properties, muscle metabolite profile and metabolic pathways associated with the occurrence of dark cutting meat in Angus x Nellore crossbreed cattle. After 14 days' ageing, dark cutting meat presented a higher pH, lower cooking loss and colour parameters, and greater tenderness compared with normal meat. Dark cutting meat had a higher ATP level and lower concentrations of glucose-6-phosphate, lactate, glucose, serine, threonine, creatine phosphate, inosine, leucine, methionine, succinate and glucose-1-phosphate compared to normal meat. In dark cutting samples, the ultimate pH was positively correlated with carnitine and negatively correlated with glucose-6-phosphate. However, in normal meat, the ultimate pH presented a positive correlation with arginine, leucine, methionine, proline, threonine, tyrosine and valine. Pathway analysis showed that differentiation of the groups was linked to energetic pathways such as starch and sucrose metabolism, the pentose phosphate pathway, amino sugar, nucleotide sugar metabolism, and glycolysis or gluconeogenesis. In conclusion, the occurrence of dark cutting meat has a notable impact on meat quality attributes and concentrations of post-mortem glycolytic metabolites, appears to be correlated with mitochondrial activity and affects energetic metabolic pathways.Entities:
Keywords: Angus; Dark cutting meat; Meat quality; Metabolites; NMR spectroscopy
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33120178 DOI: 10.1016/j.meatsci.2020.108350
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Meat Sci ISSN: 0309-1740 Impact factor: 5.209