Abstract
This review focuses on recent developments in the field of muscle biology that
reflect on the problem of toughness in beef. Meat science has shown that
post-mortem processing can make a large contribution to beef tenderness.
However live-animal factors such as growth path and genotype also influence
the toughness of beef either directly or indirectly through interactions with
processing technologies. This review sets out to integrate recent developments
in the field of meat science into a mechanistic overview of toughness, while
still highlighting the biology of some important contributors. These
contributors are discussed at several levels of order between the molecular
and the whole animal. The myofibrillar component of muscle is identified as
the major contributor to initial toughness particularly through the effects of
variation in sarcomere length. Muscle fibre-types whilst important to the
growth and development of the animal are yet to be linked convincingly with
toughness. Connective tissue is seen to play a dominant role in the sensation
of toughness in muscles where its content is high. In muscles that are
generally used for table beef, the contribution of connective tissue is less
significant. In either case its contribution to measurable toughness cannot be
easily separated from that of the myofibrillar component and the review
discusses various levels of interaction between these 2 major components of
beef. The review covers aspects of muscle ultrastructure as far as they are
pertinent to the problem of beef toughness. In particular it deals with
current knowledge of post-mortem metabolism of muscle and the degradation of
costameric structures. Molecules are considered that are likely to propagate
tensional forces from sarcomeres across the sarcolemma to the extracellular
molecules of the endomysium. While much of the research around these molecules
has not been performed by meat scientists, the insights developed are likely
to be important to our understanding of beef toughness.Technological
approaches to the objective measurement of toughness are discussed, as well as
recent developments in the field.
The review takes an integrative approach to features of the life of the bovine
that might impact on the toughness of beef derived from its carcass. Features
of the animal's pre-slaughter experience, including stress and physical
activity, have been shown to influence markedly the toughness of beef through
mechanisms that are described at the tissue level. Features of the growth path
that the animal followed during its development have also recently been shown
to significantly reduce the toughness of beef and properties of the connective
tissue component have been implicated. Areas of strategic research are
identified that, in the author's opinion, will facilitate commercial-
scale improvements in the tenderness of beef.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
83 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献