4.7 Article

Chemical reactivity of nitrite and ascorbate in a cured and cooked meat model implication in nitrosation, nitrosylation and oxidation

Journal

FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 348, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2021.129073

Keywords

Nitrite; Ham; Nitrosamine; Nitrosylheme; Nitrosothiol

Funding

  1. INRAE
  2. consortium ADDUITS

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Nitrite, when added to cured and cooked meat, enhances heme iron nitrosylation and S-nitrosation but not N-nitrosation. The presence of ascorbate helps reduce nitrosamine levels and protect nitrosothiols from degradation. The study provides new insights into the chemical reactivity of NOCs in a cured meat model.
Nitrite, added to cured meat for its bacteriological and technological properties, is implicated in the formation of nitroso compounds (NOCs), such as nitrosylheme, nitrosamines and nitrosothiols, suspected to have a potential impact on human health. The mechanisms involved in NOC formation are studied in regard with the dose-response relationship of added nitrite and its interaction with ascorbate on NOC formation in a cured and cooked meat model. The impact of a second cooking stage on nitrosation was evaluated. The addition of nitrite in the cured and cooked model promoted heme iron nitrosylation and S-nitrosation but not N-nitrosation. Nitrite reduced lipid oxidation without an additional ascorbate effect. The second cooking sharply increased the nitrosamine content while the presence of ascorbate considerably lowered their levels and protected nitrosothiols from degradation. This study gives new insights on the chemical reactivity of NOCs in a cured meat model.

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