4.5 Article

Changes in glycolytic and mitochondrial protein profiles regulates postmortem muscle acidification and oxygen consumption in dark-cutting beef

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOMICS
Volume 232, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jprot.2020.104016

Keywords

Dark-cutting; Proteomics; Postmortem acidification; Oxygen consumption; Mass spectrometry; Meat color; Bioinformatics

Funding

  1. United States National Science Foundation Major Research Instrumentation (NSF MRI)
  2. EPSCoR programs [DBI/0722494]
  3. Agriculture and Food Research Institute [2016-09054]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A comparison of protein expression profiles between dark-cutting and normal-pH beef revealed changes in proteins related to glycogen metabolism, glucose homeostasis, and mitochondrial electron transport chain. Dark-cutting beef showed down-regulation of glycogenolytic proteins and up-regulation of proteins related to oxidation-reduction processes, muscle contraction, and oxidative phosphorylation, which may contribute to its high pH and greater oxygen consumption.
Dark-cutting beef is a condition in which beef fails to have a characteristic bright-red color when the cut surface is exposed to oxygen. However, the mechanistic basis for this occurrence is not clear. Protein expression profiles were compared between dark-cutting and normal-pH beef using LC-MS/MS-based proteomics. Mass spectrometry analysis identified 1162 proteins in the proteomes of dark-cutting and normal-pH beef. Of these, 92 proteins had significant changes in protein abundance between dark-cutting versus normal-pH beef. In dark-cutting beef, 25 proteins were down-regulated, including enzymes related to glycogen metabolism, glucose homeostasis, denovo synthesis of adenosine monophosphate (AMP), and glycogen phosphorylase activity. In comparison, 27 proteins were up-regulated in dark-cutting beef related to oxidation-reduction processes, muscle contraction, and oxidative phosphorylation. Down-regulation of glycogenolytic proteins suggests decreased glycogen mobilization and utilization, while the up-regulation of mitochondrial transport chain proteins indicates a greater capacity to support mitochondrial respiration in dark-cutting beef. These results showed that changes in proteins involved in glycogenolysis and mitochondrial electron transport would promote the development of high-pH and greater oxygen consumption, respectively; thus limiting myoglobin oxygenation in dark-cutting beef. Significance: The current understanding indicates that defective glycolysis causes less carbon flow, leading to less postmortem lactic acid formation and elevated muscle pH in dark-cutting beef. However, to the best of our knowledge, limited research has evaluated how changes in glycolytic and mitochondrial protein abundance regulate postmortem muscle acidification and oxygen consumption in dark-cutting beef. We utilized a shotgun proteomics approach to elucidate potential differences in protein profiles between dark-cutting versus normal-pH beef that may influence differences in postmortem metabolism and muscle surface color characteristics. Our study shows that down-regulation of glycolgenolytic and IMP/AMP biosynthetic proteins results in elevated postmortem muscle pH in dark-cutting beef. In addition, the up-regulation of mitochondrial protein content coupled with the higher muscle pH are conducive factors for enhanced oxygen consumption and less myoglobin oxygenation, contributing to a dark meat color typically associated with dark-cutting beef.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available