The most important aspect of meat quality is its eating quality or
overall eating satisfaction, being a function of the combined effects of
tenderness, juiciness, and flavour. Meat tenderness is the most
difficultly predicted trait, but it is very important to meat
quality and consumer acceptance. Tenderness is based on ease of chewing
that is contributed by many factors. Among them, the fibrous nature of
muscle contributes to chewing resistance
The fact that many myofibrils are arranged in register across
the muscle fibers leads to more strength for muscle and decreases
muscle tenderness.
Variation in beef tenderness may be attributed to breed (genetic
status), carcass composition, and environmental factors (chronological
age, time on feed, implants and ante-mortem stress). The three factors
that determine meat tenderness are background toughness, the toughening
phase and the tenderization phase. While the toughening and
tenderization phases take place during the post-mortem storage period,
background toughness exists at the time of slaughter and does not change
during the storage period.
The tenderization process is estimated to begin soon after slaughter
(perhaps as soon as 3 h, but it is highly variable among individual
carcasses).
Current evidence suggests that proteolysis of key myofibrillar proteins
is the cause of meat tenderization. These proteins are involved in:
*Inter-myofibril linkages (e.g., desmin and vinculin),
*Intra-myofibril linkages (e.g., titin, nebulin, and possiblytroponin-T),
*Linking myofibrils to sarcolemma by costameres (e.g. vinculin and dystrophin), and
*The attachment of muscle cells to the basal lamina (e.g. laminin and fibronectin).
The function of these proteins is to maintain the structural integrity of myofibrils.
Meat tenderness
Secondary Metabolites: Crucial Compounds Supporting Plant and Human Health
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Secondary metabolites are an extraordinary array of organic compounds
synthesized by plants that go beyond basic physiological processes like
growth, dev...