J. Anim Sci.
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J. Anim. Sci. 2006. 84:291-299
© 2006 American Society of Animal Science


ANIMAL GENETICS

Association of a single nucleotide polymorphism in the calpastatin gene with carcass and meat quality traits of beef cattle1

F. S. Schenkel*,2, S. P. Miller*, Z. Jiang{dagger}, I. B. Mandell*, X. Ye*, H. Li* and J. W. Wilton*

* Department of Animal and Poultry Science, University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada N1G-2W1; and and {dagger} Department of Animal Science, Washington State University, Pullman 99164-6351

2 Corresponding author: Schenkel{at}uoguelph.ca

Calpastatin (CAST) is a naturally occurring protein that inhibits the normal tenderization of meat as it ages postmortem. A SNP was identified in the CAST gene (a G to C substitution) and genotyped on crossbred commercially fed heifers (n = 163), steers (n = 226), and bulls (n = 61) from beef feedlots, and steers (n = 178) from a University of Guelph feeding trial. The association of the CAST SNP with carcass and meat quality traits was studied. Carcass traits included fat, lean, and bone yield; grade fat; LM area; and HCW. Meat quality traits included marbling grade; i.m. fat content of LM; tenderness evaluation of LM (Warner-Bratzler shear force) at 2, 7, 14, and 21 d of postmortem aging; and tenderness evaluation of semitendinosus muscle at 7 d of postmortem aging. The mixed model used in the analyses included fixed effects of CAST genotype, sex, slaughter group, and breed composition (linear covariate); sire was a random effect. For the analysis of shear force, i.m. fat content of LM was also included in the model as a linear covariate. Shear force measures were analyzed within days of postmortem aging and by repeated measures analysis. The CAST SNP allele C was more frequent (63%) in the crossbred population than allele G. The CAST SNP was associated with shear force across days of postmortem aging (P = 0.005); genotype CC yielded beef that was more tender than GG (–0.32 kg ± 0.13), and CG had intermediate tenderness. The corresponding average allele substitution effect (G to C substitution) was also highly significant (–0.15 ± 0.05 kg, P = 0.002). A lower percentage of unacceptably tough steaks (shear force >5.7 kg) at 2 and 7 d postmortem was associated with an increasing number of C alleles (P ≤ 0.05). At 7 d postmortem, the percentage of unacceptably tough steaks decreased by 24 and 35%, respectively, for animals carrying 1 and 2 copies of the C allele relative to animals with no C alleles. However, genotype CC had a greater fat yield (+1.44 ± 0.56%; P = 0.037) than genotype GG, with a corresponding allele substitution effect of 0.67 ± 0.27% (P = 0.015). Therefore, the CAST SNP allele C was associated with increased LM tenderness across days of postmortem aging and, importantly for the beef industry, had a significant reduction in the percentage of steaks rated unacceptably tough by consumers based on an assumed threshold level.

Key Words: beef breed • calpastatin gene • carcass trait • meat quality • single nucleotide polymorphism • tenderness




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