| Literature DB >> 34034056 |
Wei Jia1, Ruiting Li2, Xixuan Wu2, Shuxing Liu2, Lin Shi2.
Abstract
Thermal processing affects the lipid compositions of meat products. The study determined the effects of boiled, steamed and roasted processing methods on the lipidomics profiles of Tan sheep meat with a validated UPLC-Q-Orbitrap HRMS combined lipid screening strategy method. Combined with sphingolipid metabolism, the boiled approach was the suitable choice for atherosclerosis patients for more losses of sphingomyelin than ceramide in meat. The similarly less losses of phosphatidylcholine and lysophosphatidylcholine showed in glycerophospholipid metabolism implied that steamed Tan sheep meat was more suitable for the populations of elderly and infants. Furthermore, a total of 90 lipids with significant difference (VIP > 1) in 6 lipid subclasses (sphingomyelin, ceramide, lysophosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamines, triacylglycerol,) were quantified among raw and three types of thermal processed Tan sheep meat, further providing useful information for identification of meat products with different thermal processing methods (LOD with 0.14-0.31 μg kg-1, LOQ with 0.39-0.90 μg kg-1).Entities:
Keywords: Lipidomics; Pathway analysis; Tan sheep; Thermal processing; UHPLC-Q-Orbitrap HRMS
Year: 2021 PMID: 34034056 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2021.130153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514