Effect of different sources of dietary starch on meat quality, oxidative status and glycogen and lactate kinetic in chicken pectoralis muscle

Del Puerto Di Landro, Marta - Terevinto Herrera, María Alejandra - Saadoun, Ali - Olivero Troise, Roberto - Cabrera Bascardal, María Cristina

Resumen:

We studied the effects of different dietary starch sources fed to poultry on the quality attributes and oxidative damage in fresh and aged chicken pectoralis muscle. In a corn-soya diet, 300 g.kg-1 of the starch from ground corn was replaced by starch from broken corn, ground sorghum or pure starch, and fed for 11 days prior to slaughter to male broilers. In pectoralis muscle, pH rate, colour, drip loss, glycogen and lactate were measured at 10, 45, 90 minutes and 24 hours postmortem. Protein, lipid oxidation and haem iron were measured in fresh and aged meat. Sorghum starch caused a lower initial pH, while broken corn and pure starch gave higher pH in the pectoralis muscle. Ground corn and pure starch sources showed the lowest pH (45 min postmortem) indicating faster decline curves. Ground sorghum produced a lower level of residual glycogen in muscle and a lower rate of protein oxidation while the highest glycogen and a higher protein oxidation rate was observed with pure starch Type of starch sources in diet received prior to slaughter affect the quality parameters in poultry meat. Particularly, ground sorghum improved meat quality whereas pure starch provoked a higher protein oxidation.


Detalles Bibliográficos
2016
Pectoralis
Poultry
Starch sources
Meat quality
Lipid and protein oxidation
Inglés
Universidad de la República
COLIBRI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12008/22096
Acceso abierto
Licencia Creative Commons Atribución (CC –BY 4.0)

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