Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2450071 Meat Science 2013 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Masseter had higher haem iron and myoglobin and smaller fibres than other muscles.•Longissimus had higher non-haem iron than Masseter.•Longissimus and Semitendinosus white showed similar fibre type distribution.•Muscle fibre size was muscle and fibre type dependent.•Amount of expressible juice was inversely related to content of connective tissue.

Three porcine muscles (Longissimus thoracis, Semitendinosus, Masseter), known to have large differences in biochemical and histological traits, were fully characterized and the link between muscle structure and quality evaluated. The oxidative Masseter had more pigment, higher content of metmyoglobin, haem iron, protein and collagen, and was redder with higher fibre numbers, fibre circularity, pH and water holding capacity than the glycolytic Longissimus. Fibre type distribution showed predominance of type IIB in Longissimus and Semitendinosus white, type I in Semitendinosus red and IIA in Masseter. Type I fibres were larger than type IIB and IIA in Semitendinosus and Masseter, respectively, but not in the Longissimus, indicating that fibre size is muscle dependent. Muscle redness was positively correlated with type I fibre traits, haem iron and metmyoglobin, and negatively associated with type II fibre characteristics, non-haem iron and oxymyoglobin. Expressible juice had positive correlation with fibre size and negative with fibre number and connective tissue.

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
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