4.7 Article

Proteomics of Muscle-Specific Beef Color Stability

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 60, Issue 12, Pages 3196-3203

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jf204188v

Keywords

beef color; color stability; Longissimus lumborum; Psoas major; sarcoplasmic proteome

Funding

  1. National Research Initiative from the USDA Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service [2009-35503-05194]
  2. National Institute of Health's National Center for Research Resources [P20 RR020171]

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The objective of the present study was to differentiate the sarcoplasmic proteome of color-stable (Longissimus lumborum; LL) and color-labile (Psoas major; PM) beef muscles. LL and PM muscles from seven beef carcasses (24 h postmortem) were fabricated into 2.54 cm steaks, aerobically packaged, and assigned to refrigerated retail display for 9 days. LL steaks demonstrated greater (P < 0.05) color stability and lower (P < 0.05) lipid oxidation than PM steaks. Proteome analyses identified 16 differentially abundant proteins in LL and PM, including antioxidant proteins and chaperones. Proteins demonstrating positive correlation with redness (aldose reductase, creatine kinase, and beta-enolase) and color stability (peroxiredoxin-2, peptide methionine sulfoxide reductase, and heat shock protein-27 kDa) were overabundant in LL, whereas the protein overabundant in PM (mitochondrial aconitase) exhibited negative correlation with redness. The color stability of LL could be attributed to the overabundance of antioxidant proteins and chaperones, and this finding suggests the necessity of developing muscle-specific processing strategies to improve beef color.

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