Effects of storage time and temperature on lipid oxidation and protein co-oxidation of low-moisture shredded meat products

Studies on the oxidative changes in meat-based, low-moisture, ready to eat foods are complicated due to complex food system and slow lipid-protein oxidative deterioration. The current study evaluates the oxidative changes over six months of storage on shredded beef and chicken products (locally know...

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Published in:Antioxidants
Main Author: Wazir H.; Chay S.Y.; Zarei M.; Hussin F.S.; Mustapha N.A.; Ibadullah W.Z.W.; Saari N.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI 2019
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85073759701&doi=10.3390%2fantiox8100486&partnerID=40&md5=234239e5aa5e540d8b0bcf4da6a4aba7
id 2-s2.0-85073759701
spelling 2-s2.0-85073759701
Wazir H.; Chay S.Y.; Zarei M.; Hussin F.S.; Mustapha N.A.; Ibadullah W.Z.W.; Saari N.
Effects of storage time and temperature on lipid oxidation and protein co-oxidation of low-moisture shredded meat products
2019
Antioxidants
8
10
10.3390/antiox8100486
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85073759701&doi=10.3390%2fantiox8100486&partnerID=40&md5=234239e5aa5e540d8b0bcf4da6a4aba7
Studies on the oxidative changes in meat-based, low-moisture, ready to eat foods are complicated due to complex food system and slow lipid-protein oxidative deterioration. The current study evaluates the oxidative changes over six months of storage on shredded beef and chicken products (locally known as serunding) for physicochemical analysis, lipid oxidation (conjugated dienes and malondialdehydes) and protein co-oxidation (soluble protein content, amino acid composition, protein carbonyl, tryptophan loss and Schiff base fluorescence) at 25◦ C, 40◦ C and 60◦ C. The lipid stability of chicken serunding was significantly lower than beef serunding, illustrated by higher conjugated dienes content and higher rate of malondialdehyde formation during storage. In terms of protein co-oxidation, chicken serunding with higher polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) experienced more severe oxidation, as seen from lower protein solubility, higher protein carbonyl and Schiff base formation compared to beef serunding. To conclude, chicken serunding demonstrates lower lipid and protein stability and exhibits higher rate of lipid oxidation and protein co-oxidation than beef serunding. These findings provide insights on the progression of lipid oxidation and protein co-oxidation in cooked, shredded meat products and could be extrapolated to minimize possible adverse effects arising from lipid oxidation and protein co-oxidation, on the quality of low-moisture, high-lipid, high-protein foods. © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
MDPI
20763921
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Wazir H.; Chay S.Y.; Zarei M.; Hussin F.S.; Mustapha N.A.; Ibadullah W.Z.W.; Saari N.
spellingShingle Wazir H.; Chay S.Y.; Zarei M.; Hussin F.S.; Mustapha N.A.; Ibadullah W.Z.W.; Saari N.
Effects of storage time and temperature on lipid oxidation and protein co-oxidation of low-moisture shredded meat products
author_facet Wazir H.; Chay S.Y.; Zarei M.; Hussin F.S.; Mustapha N.A.; Ibadullah W.Z.W.; Saari N.
author_sort Wazir H.; Chay S.Y.; Zarei M.; Hussin F.S.; Mustapha N.A.; Ibadullah W.Z.W.; Saari N.
title Effects of storage time and temperature on lipid oxidation and protein co-oxidation of low-moisture shredded meat products
title_short Effects of storage time and temperature on lipid oxidation and protein co-oxidation of low-moisture shredded meat products
title_full Effects of storage time and temperature on lipid oxidation and protein co-oxidation of low-moisture shredded meat products
title_fullStr Effects of storage time and temperature on lipid oxidation and protein co-oxidation of low-moisture shredded meat products
title_full_unstemmed Effects of storage time and temperature on lipid oxidation and protein co-oxidation of low-moisture shredded meat products
title_sort Effects of storage time and temperature on lipid oxidation and protein co-oxidation of low-moisture shredded meat products
publishDate 2019
container_title Antioxidants
container_volume 8
container_issue 10
doi_str_mv 10.3390/antiox8100486
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85073759701&doi=10.3390%2fantiox8100486&partnerID=40&md5=234239e5aa5e540d8b0bcf4da6a4aba7
description Studies on the oxidative changes in meat-based, low-moisture, ready to eat foods are complicated due to complex food system and slow lipid-protein oxidative deterioration. The current study evaluates the oxidative changes over six months of storage on shredded beef and chicken products (locally known as serunding) for physicochemical analysis, lipid oxidation (conjugated dienes and malondialdehydes) and protein co-oxidation (soluble protein content, amino acid composition, protein carbonyl, tryptophan loss and Schiff base fluorescence) at 25◦ C, 40◦ C and 60◦ C. The lipid stability of chicken serunding was significantly lower than beef serunding, illustrated by higher conjugated dienes content and higher rate of malondialdehyde formation during storage. In terms of protein co-oxidation, chicken serunding with higher polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) experienced more severe oxidation, as seen from lower protein solubility, higher protein carbonyl and Schiff base formation compared to beef serunding. To conclude, chicken serunding demonstrates lower lipid and protein stability and exhibits higher rate of lipid oxidation and protein co-oxidation than beef serunding. These findings provide insights on the progression of lipid oxidation and protein co-oxidation in cooked, shredded meat products and could be extrapolated to minimize possible adverse effects arising from lipid oxidation and protein co-oxidation, on the quality of low-moisture, high-lipid, high-protein foods. © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
publisher MDPI
issn 20763921
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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