Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5791831 | Meat Science | 2014 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
First we looked for putative causative mutations in the CAST and CAPN1 genes associated with meat tenderness and found a total of 31 and 7 polymorphisms, respectively, in the Parda de Montaña and Pirenaica breeds. Tenderness was not affected by mutations in CAPN1. However, three SNPs located at intron 5 (BTA7: g.98533962C>G on UMD 3.0), exon 7 (g.98535683A>G) and intron 12 (g.98545188T>A) of the CAST gene were significantly associated with meat tenderness at 7Â days post-mortem in the Parda de Montaña breed. The haplotypes h2 and h5 showed significant associations with meat toughness being consistent with the SNP association results, which showed that the g.98535683A>G SNP in CAST might be the causative mutation of the effect found in this study. This mutation changes the amino acid sequence at position p.Thr182Ala (NM_174003). This amino acid substitution could affect the interacting regions between the calpastatin L-domain and calpain, and then could generate a more stable union between calpain and calpastatin.
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Authors
J.H. Calvo, L.P. Iguácel, J.K. Kirinus, M. Serrano, G. Ripoll, I. Casasús, M. Joy, L. Pérez-Velasco, P. Sarto, P. AlbertÃ, M. Blanco,