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Using 2D qNMR analysis to distinguish between frozen and frozen/thawed chicken meat and evaluate freshness.

Hyun Cheol KimKi Ho BaekYee Eun LeeTaemin KangHyun Jun KimDongheon LeeCheorun Jo
Published in: NPJ science of food (2022)
We identified key metabolites reflecting microbial spoilage and differentiated unfrozen meat from frozen/thawed (FT) using 2D qNMR analysis. Unfrozen and FT chicken breasts were prepared, individually aerobically packaged, and stored for 16 days at 2 °C. Only volatile basic nitrogen (VBN) was significantly changed after 6 log CFU/g of total aerobic bacteria (p < 0.05). Extended storage resulted in an increase in organic acids, free amino acids, biogenic amines, and hypoxanthine and a decrease in N,N-dimethylglycine, inosine 5'-monophosphate, and proline. Acetic acid demonstrated the highest correlation with VBN (r = 0.97). Unfrozen and FT breast meat can be differentiated by uniform concentration of carnosine, β-alanine, and histidine levels, consistent changes in nucleotides by storage time, and changes in microbial metabolism patterns that are reflected by some free amino acids. Thus, NMR-based metabolomics can be used to evaluate chicken breast meat freshness and distinguish between unfrozen and FT meat.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • magnetic resonance
  • high resolution
  • ms ms
  • room temperature
  • water soluble
  • liquid chromatography