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Comparison of chicken breast quality characteristics and metabolites due to different rearing environments and refrigerated storage
Cited 13 time in
Web of Science
Cited 14 time in Scopus
- Authors
- Issue Date
- 2022-07
- Publisher
- Poultry Science Association Inc.
- Citation
- Poultry Science, Vol.101 No.7
- Abstract
- The objective of the present study was to compare the breast meat quality and metabolomic characteristics from broilers that were raised in conventional (conventional farm reared-broilers; CB, n = 20) and legally approved animal welfare farms (welfare farm reared-broilers; WB, n = 20) in aerobic cold storage (1, 3, 5, and 7 d). Compared to CB chickens, the WB chickens had a larger floor size as well as lower stocking density, atmospheric ammonia, and nipple-shared chicken counts. The results demonstrated significantly higher pH, L*- and b*-value, and lower shear force in CB compared to WB during cold storage. Using 1H NMR analysis, 25 compounds were identified in the chicken breast meat. Partial least square-discriminant analysis (PLS DA) was performed based on the identified metabolites. The content of 15 metabolites (1 di-peptide, 9 free amino acids, 2 glycolytic potential-related products, 2 nucleotide-related products, and 1 organic acid) was signifi-cantly different due to the rearing environment (CB vs. WB). Among them, all free amino acids were higher in CB than in WB. Six free amino acids (glycine, isoleucine, leucine, phenylalanine, valine, and b-alanine) had variable importance in projection (VIP) score > 1, regardless of the number of cold storage days. Therefore, these compounds in the breast meat may be used as potential markers to determine the rearing environment of broilers. Also, this result might be an indication of stress-related meat quality changes in broilers.
- ISSN
- 0032-5791
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Related Researcher
- College of Agriculture and Life Sciences
- Department of Agricultural Biotechnology
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