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Increased collagen III in culled chicken meat after feeding dietary wood charcoal and vinegar contributes to palatability and tenderness
Author(s) -
Yamauchi Kohsyo,
Manabe Noboru,
Matsumoto Yoshiki,
Takenoyama Shinichi,
Yamauchi Kohen
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
animal science journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.606
H-Index - 38
eISSN - 1740-0929
pISSN - 1344-3941
DOI - 10.1111/asj.12160
Subject(s) - palatability , tenderness , food science , chemistry , broiler , lipid oxidation , zoology , biology , biochemistry , antioxidant
We comprehensively evaluated meat quality in chickens fed a diet consisting of wood charcoal and vinegar ( WCV ) using food scientific and histological approaches. In culled hens, lipid and fatty acid in M usculus semimembranosus, cooking loss and sensory tests of whole thigh meat, and meat texture of breast meat were observed. In male broilers, cross section of M . semimembranosus was used for observations on muscle area, perimysium, non‐collagen total protein and total collagen content, and anti‐collagen I and III reactions. In frozen male broilers, conventional morphology of M . semimembranosus as well as chicken anti‐collagen III reaction to selected muscles of thigh meat and breast meat were compared between the control and WCV ‐fed birds. Increased lipid and fatty acids, decreased cooking loss, high score in total evaluation for sensory test of thigh meat, and decreased meat texture values were observed for culled hens fed WCV . The higher values of muscle area, total collagen and collagen III were observed for broilers fed WCV . No perimysium collapse for M . semitendinosus or increased collagen III reactions of M . tensor fasciae latae, the flexor muscle group and M . pectoralis superficialis were observed for frozen muscles in the WCV group. These total results suggest that WCV produces palatable and tender meat by increasing collagen III .