Publication | Open Access
Role of Calpains in Postmortem Proteolysis in Chicken Muscle
73
Citations
49
References
2008
Year
Muscle FunctionMammalian PhysiologyPathologyEducationChicken MuscleOsteoporosisSkeletal MuscleAnimal PhysiologyVeterinary PhysiologyMolecular PhysiologyBiochemistryAnimal SciencePhysiologyVeterinary ScienceMetabolismMedicineCalpain SystemMu-calpain ActivityPoultry Science
Tenderness is governed by postmortem biochemical processes, particularly proteolysis. In mammals, the calpain system is generally accepted as the main system involved in postmortem proteolysis. In poultry, the 2 calpains (mu and mu/m--a form only found in bird tissue) have greater calcium sensitivity. In this study, we quantified by zymography the changes in postmortem calpain system activity. The mu/m-calpain activity remained steady, whereas the mu-calpain activity had disappeared by 6 h after postmortem, showing an activation by calcium. Changes in the electrophoretic pattern of sarcoplasmic and myofibrillar proteins are observed in the first postmortem hours concomitantly to the decrease in mu-calpain activity. The 30-kDa protein, considered as a good marker of postmortem aging in cattle, appeared from 6 h and then steadily increased. In chicken muscle, the rapid maximum tenderness reached could be explained by a greater activation of the calpain system.
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