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Journal of Animal Science, Vol 77, Issue 3 661-668, Copyright © 1999 by American Society of Animal Science
JOURNAL ARTICLE |
T. Parr, P. L. Sensky, G. P. Scothern, R. G. Bardsley, P. J. Buttery, J. D. Wood and C. Warkup
Division of Nutritional Biochemistry, School of Biological Sciences, University of Nottingham, Loughborough, Leicestershire, UK. tim.parr@nottingham.ac.uk
Tenderization of skeletal muscle in meat animals has been closely linked to the postmortem activity of the calpain proteolytic enzyme system, which includes the specific inhibitor calpastatin. Increased understanding of the skeletal muscle-specific calpain isoform p94 has prompted suggestions as to whether it too could have a role in the tenderization process. In this study, two groups of pigs were identified in which shear force measurements after 8 d of conditioning indicated a large variation in the tenderness of longissimus muscle. The quantity of p94 in the muscle was monitored by immunoblotting, using a porcine-specific polyclonal antibody raised against a recombinant peptide fragment generated as a fusion protein. The antiserum recognized a 94-kDa protein associated with myofibrils in skeletal but not cardiac muscle, as expected for this calpain isoform, although it could not be tested with the native protein because of the extreme instability of p94. In the first experiment, the mean shear force for the tough group was 6.71 +/- .28 kg (n = 12, SEM) and that of the tender group was 3.87 +/- .12 kg (n = 12), but there was no difference in the normalized absorbance of the immunopositive 94 kDa band on Western blots from samples collected at approximately 40 min postmortem. In the second experiment, the stability of p94 in chilled carcasses was investigated over 24 h, using a further two groups of 10 tough and 10 tender pigs of mean shear force values 5.36 +/- .14 kg and 2.81 +/- .15 kg, respectively. In tough and tender animals, there was a decline (P < .05) in the 94-kDa immunostaining material of mean half-lives of 13.8 and 12.9 h, respectively, although there was considerable variability. Despite this variability in half lives and shear force values, no correlation was seen between these factors. Thus, in porcine longissimus muscle, the variability in tenderness after 8 d of conditioning cannot be attributed to an underlying variability in p94.
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