New Insights on the Impact of Cattle Handling on Post-Mortem Myofibrillar Muscle Proteome and Meat Tenderization
Author
Sierra, VerónicaGonzález-Blanco, Laura
Diñeiro, Yolanda
Díaz, Fernando
García-Espina, María Josefa
Coto-Montes, Ana
Gagaoua, Mohammed
Oliván, Mamen
Keyword
intensive managementextensive management
mixing unfamiliar animals
myofibrillar proteins
pre-slaughter stress
protein biomarkers
Date
2021-12-15
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Sierra, V.; González-Blanco, L.; Diñeiro, Y.; Díaz, F.; García-Espina, M.J.; Coto-Montes, A.; Gagaoua, M.; Oliván, M. New Insights on the Impact of Cattle Handling on Post-Mortem Myofibrillar Muscle Proteome and Meat Tenderization. Foods 2021, 10, 3115. https://doi.org/ 10.3390/foods10123115Abstract
This study investigated the effect of different cattle management strategies at farm (Intensive vs. Extensive) and during transport and lairage (mixing vs. non-mixing with unfamiliar animals) on the myofibrillar subproteome of Longissimus thoracis et lumborum (LTL) muscle of “Asturiana de los Valles” yearling bulls. It further aimed to study the relationships with beef quality traits including pH, color, and tenderness evaluated by Warner–Bratzler shear force (WBSF). Thus, comparative proteomics of the myofibrillar fraction along meat maturation (from 2 h to 14 days post-mortem) and different quality traits were analyzed. A total of 23 protein fragments corresponding to 21 unique proteins showed significant differences among the treatments (p < 0.05) due to any of the factors considered (Farm, Transport and Lairage, and post-mortem time ageing). The proteins belong to several biological pathways including three structural proteins (MYBPC2, TNNT3, and MYL1) and one metabolic enzyme (ALDOA) that were affected by both Farm and Transport/Lairage factors. ACTA1, LDB3, and FHL2 were affected by Farm factors, while TNNI2 and MYLPF (structural proteins), PKM (metabolic enzyme), and HSPB1 (small Heat shock protein) were affected by Transport/Lairage factors. Several correlations were found between the changing proteins (PKM, ALDOA, TNNI2, TNNT3, ACTA1, MYL1, and CRYAB) and color and tenderness beef quality traits, indicating their importance in the determination of meat quality and their possible use as putative biomarkers.Funder
Marie Sklodowska-Curie grantGrant Number
agreement No. 713654ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10123115
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