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Review of the Greening Reaction by Thermal Treatment: New Insights Exploring the Structural Implications of Myoglobin.

Andrés Álvarez-ArmentaJosé Ángel Huerta-OcampoAlonso Alexis Lopez-ZavalaRamón Pacheco-AguilarRogerio R Sotelo-MundoDavid O Corona-MartinezJuan Carlos Ramírez-Suárez
Published in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2023)
Myoglobin is the main factor responsible for muscle pigmentation in tuna; muscle color depends upon changes in the oxidative state of myoglobin. The tuna industry has reported muscle greening after thermal treatment involving metmyoglobin (MetMb), trimethylamine oxide (TMAO), and free cysteine (Cys). It has been proposed that this pigmentation change is due to a disulfide bond between a unique cysteine residue (Cys10) found in tuna MetMb and free Cys. However, no evidence has been given to confirm that this reaction occurs. In this review, new findings about the mechanism of this greening reaction are discussed, showing evidence of how free radicals produced from Cys oxidation under thermal treatment participate in the greening of tuna and horse muscle during thermal treatment. In addition, the reaction conditions are compared to other green myoglobins, such as sulfmyoglobin, verdomyoglobin, and cholemyoglobin.
Keyphrases
  • skeletal muscle
  • nitric oxide