Lipidome and metabolome profiling of longissimus lumborum beef with different ultimate pH and postmortem aging.
Alan Giovanini de Oliveira SartoriDaniel Silva AntoneloGabriel Henrique RibeiroLuiz Alberto ColnagoJúlio César de Carvalho BalieiroEduardo Francisquine DelgadoCarmen Josefina Contreras CastilloPublished in: Meat science (2024)
The objective of this exploratory study was to assess the changes on lipidome and metabolome profiling of Longissimus lumborum bull muscle with different ultimate pH (pHu) and aging periods. The bull muscles classified as normal, intermediate, or high pHu were collected from a Brazilian commercial slaughterhouse, cut into steaks, individually vacuum-packaged, and aged for 3 days (3-d) or 21 days (21-d) at 2 °C. Muscle extracts were analyzed for the profiles of both lipids, by mass spectrometry (via direct flow-injection), and metabolites, by nuclear magnetic resonance, with downstream multivariate data analysis. As major results, pairwise comparisons identified C12:0 and C14:0 acylcarnitines as potential biomarkers of the intermediate pHu-muscle, which are related to lipid catabolism for alternative energy metabolism and indicate less protein breakage postmortem. Interestingly, the concentration of arginine at early postmortem aging (3-d) may influence the previously reported improved tenderness in normal and high pHu-muscles. Moreover, upregulation of fumarate, formate, and acetate with increased pHu muscle at 21-d aging indicate more intense tricarboxylic acid cycle, amino acid degradation, and pyruvate oxidation by reactive oxygen species, respectively. These three compounds (fumarate, formate, and acetate) discriminated statistically the muscle with high pHu at 21-d aging. The normal pHu-muscle showed higher concentrations of glycogenolysis and glycolysis metabolites, including glucose, mannose, and pyruvate. Hence, our results enhance knowledge of postmortem biochemical changes of beef within different pHu groups aged up to 21 days, which is essential to understand the mechanisms underpinning bull meat quality changes.
Keyphrases
- skeletal muscle
- data analysis
- magnetic resonance
- amino acid
- mass spectrometry
- healthcare
- reactive oxygen species
- ultrasound guided
- cell proliferation
- hydrogen peroxide
- single cell
- fatty acid
- computed tomography
- nitric oxide
- magnetic resonance imaging
- weight loss
- small molecule
- metabolic syndrome
- adipose tissue
- high performance liquid chromatography
- quality improvement
- long non coding rna