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Postmortem Metabolism and Pork Quality Development Are Affected by Electrical Stimulation across Three Genetic Lines.

Matthew D SpiresJocelyn S BodmerMariane BelineJordan C WicksMorgan D ZumbaughTim Hao ShiBrian T ReichertAllan Paul SchinckelAlan L GrantDavid E Gerrard
Published in: Animals : an open access journal from MDPI (2023)
Variations in postmortem metabolism in muscle impact pork quality development. Curiously, some genetic lines are more refractile to adverse pork quality development than others and may regulate energy metabolism differently. The aim of this study was to challenge pork carcasses from different genetic populations with electrical stimulation (ES) to determine how postmortem metabolism varies with genetic line and explore control points that reside in glycolysis in dying muscle. Three genetic populations (GP) were subjected to ES (100 V or 200 V, 13 pulses, 2 s on/2 s off) at 15- or 25-min post-exsanguination, or no stimulation (NS). Genetic population affected relative muscle relative abundance of different myosin heavy chains, glycogen, G6P, and lactate concentrations. Genetic lines responded similarly to ES, but a comparison of ES treatment groups revealed a trend for an interaction between voltage, time of ES, and time postmortem. Higher voltage accelerated pH decline at 20 min up to 60 min postmortem. Trends in color and firmness scores and L* values were consistent with pH and metabolite data. These data show that genetic populations respond differently to postmortem perturbation by altering glycolytic flux and suggest differences in postmortem glycolysis may be partially responsible for differences in meat quality between genetic populations, though not entirely.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • skeletal muscle
  • emergency department
  • spinal cord injury
  • dna methylation
  • quality improvement
  • palliative care
  • electronic health record
  • deep learning
  • big data
  • binding protein