Food Biochemistry and Food Processing (2 edition)

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BLBS102-c15 BLBS102-Simpson March 21, 2012 13:21 Trim: 276mm X 219mm Printer Name: Yet to Come


292 Part 3: Meat, Poultry and Seafoods

Muscle
Slaughter: Blood circulation is stopped

Very fast decrease of oxygen concentration in the muscle

g pp

Lack of available oxygen
Redox potential decreases
down to –50 mV Cell respiration stops

Cease of the activity
of the mitochondrial system

Lactic acid is generated The enzymatic generation of ATP is reduced

Glycolysis

and accumulated

pH drops down to around 5.6 Actomyosin is formed

ATP consumption

Enzyme inhibition

Proteins are denaturated Decrease in water-binding capacity

Contraction

Reduction in red color

Release of water and soluble nutrients

Rigor mortis

Figure 15.2.Summary of main changes during conversion of muscle to meat.

and drastic consequences. The first consequence is the reduc-
tion of the oxygen concentration within the muscle cell because
the oxygen supply has stopped. An immediate consequence is a
reduction in mitochondrial activity and cell respiration (Pearson
1987). Under normal aerobic values (see an example of resting
muscle in Fig. 15.3), the muscle is able to produce 12 moles of
adenosine triphosphate (ATP) per mole of glucose, and thus the
ATP content is kept around 5–8μmol/g of muscle (Greser 1986).
ATP constitutes the main source of energy for the contraction
and relaxation of the muscle structures as well as other biochem-

Resting muscle Stressed muscle
Glycogen
Blood Glucose

12ATP
(TCA cycle)

Glucose

2ATP
(anaerobic)

O 2

y g

Glycogen

Energy-requiring processes
as creatin phosphatein
mitochondria

Energy-requiring
processes

CO 2 Lactic acid

Blood

Figure 15.3.Comparison of energy generation between resting and
stressed muscles.

ical reactions in postmortem muscle. As the redox potential is
reduced toward anaerobic values, ATP generation is more costly.
So, only 2 moles of ATP are produced per mole of glucose under
anaerobic conditions (an example of a stressed muscle is shown
in Fig. 15.3). The extent of anaerobic glycolysis depends on the
reserves of glycogen in the muscle (Greaser 1986). Glycogen
is converted to dextrins, maltose, and finally, glucose through
a phosphorolytic pathway; glucose is then converted into lactic
acid with the synthesis of 2 moles of ATP (Eskin 1990). In addi-
tion, the enzyme creatine kinase may generate some additional
ATP from adenosine diphosphate (ADP) and creatine phosphate
at very early postmortem times, but only while creatine phos-
phate remains. The contents of creatine have been reported to
vary depending on the type of muscle (Mora et al. 2008). The
main steps in glycolysis are schematized in Figure 15.4.
The generation of ATP is strictly necessary in the muscle to
supply the required energy for muscle contraction and relaxation
and to drive the sodium-potassium pump of the membranes and
the calcium pump in the sarcoplasmic reticulum. The initial
situation in postmortem muscle is rather similar to that in the
stressed muscle, but with an important change: the absence
of blood circulation. Thus, there is a lack of nutrient supply
and waste removal (see Fig. 15.5). Initially, the ATP content in
postmortem muscle does not drop substantially because some
ATP may be formed from ceratin phosphate through the action
of the enzyme creatine kinase and through anaerobic glycolysis.
As mentioned earlier, once creatine phosphate and glycogen
are exhausted, ATP drops within a few hours to negligible
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