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Full-Text Articles in Meat Science
Native Beef Collagenase Mmp-9 May Contribute To Tenderness Improvement By Degrading Connective Tissues In Extended Aged Beef, L. A. Koulicoff, A. A. Welter, P. A. Hammond, C. K. Chun, T. G. O'Quinn, G. Magnin-Bissel, M. D. Chao
Native Beef Collagenase Mmp-9 May Contribute To Tenderness Improvement By Degrading Connective Tissues In Extended Aged Beef, L. A. Koulicoff, A. A. Welter, P. A. Hammond, C. K. Chun, T. G. O'Quinn, G. Magnin-Bissel, M. D. Chao
Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Reports
Objective:Collagen is one of the main components in the connective tissue (CT) and contributes to background toughness in beef. It is known that in living animals, collagen can be degraded and remodeled by collagenase matrix metalloproteinases (MMP); however, it is unclear if collagenase MMP can impact CT texture during postmortem aging of beef. Therefore, this study aimed to understand how collagenase MMP activity may impact postmortem connective tissue degradation in beef in three different cuts and four different aging periods.
Study Description:Beef boneless striploin, top sirloin butt, and heel were acquired from 10 U.S. Department of Agriculture high …
An Investigation On The Influence Of Various Biochemical Tenderness Factors On Eight Different Bovine Muscles, P. A. Hammond, C. K. Chun, W. Wu, A. A. Welter, T. G. O'Quinn, G. Magnin-Bissel, E. Geisbrecht, M. D. Chao
An Investigation On The Influence Of Various Biochemical Tenderness Factors On Eight Different Bovine Muscles, P. A. Hammond, C. K. Chun, W. Wu, A. A. Welter, T. G. O'Quinn, G. Magnin-Bissel, E. Geisbrecht, M. D. Chao
Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Reports
Objective:Beef tenderness is a complex palatability trait with many tenderness-contributing components. The objective of this study is to understand the relative contribution of each tenderness component to eight different beef muscles.
Study Description:Top sirloin butt, ribeye, brisket, flank, knuckle, eye of round, mock tender, and shoulder clod were collected from 10 U.S. Department of Agriculture high choice beef carcasses and assigned to a 2- or 21-day aging period (n = 160). Protein degradation, collagen content, mature collagen crosslink density, intramuscular lipid content, pH, shear force, and trained sensory panel analysis were determined. A Pearson correlation analysis was used …
A Preliminary Investigation Of The Contribution Of Different Tenderness Factors To Beef Loin, Tri-Tip, And Heel Tenderness, C. K. Chun, W. Wu, A. A. Welter, T. G. O'Quinn, G. Magnin-Bissel, D. L. Boyle, M. D. Chao
A Preliminary Investigation Of The Contribution Of Different Tenderness Factors To Beef Loin, Tri-Tip, And Heel Tenderness, C. K. Chun, W. Wu, A. A. Welter, T. G. O'Quinn, G. Magnin-Bissel, D. L. Boyle, M. D. Chao
Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Reports
Objective:The objective is to better understand the contribution of each tenderness factor to the perception of tenderness of three specific beef muscles with similar tenderness ratings.
Study Description:Longissimus lumborum (loin), tensor fascia latae (tri-tip), and gastrocnemius (heel) were collected from 10 U.S. Department of Agriculture low Choice beef carcasses and assigned to a 5- or 21-day aging period (n = 60). Steaks from each aging period from each subprimal were assigned to one of three assays: 1) trained sensory analysis; 2) objective tenderness evaluation (Warner-Bratzler shear force); or 3) physiochemical analysis (sarcomere length, proteolysis, intramuscular fat content, collagen …