This study aimed to compare the similarities, physicochemical properties, and
muscle fiber characteristics of porcine skeletal muscles. Fourteen types of
muscles were collected from nine pig carcasses at 24 h post-mortem and
classified by muscle architecture into two main groups, namely parallel and
pennate. The muscles were further differentiated into three subtypes per group.
These included fan-shaped, fusiform, and strap for the parallel group, and
unipennate, bipennate, and multipennate for the pennate group. Parallel-fibered
muscles, which were composed of larger I, IIA, IIX, and IIXB fibers and a lower
density of IIA fibers, showed higher redness and yellowness values than
pennate-fibered muscles (p<0.05). However, the relative fiber area was
not significantly different between the parallel and pennate groups
(p>0.05). In the subtypes of parallel architecture, the strap group
showed lower moisture content and higher redness values than the other subtypes
and had considerably higher amounts of oxidative fibers (I and IIA;
72.3%) than the fan-shaped and fusiform groups (p<0.05). In the
pennate group, unipennate showed comparatively lower moisture content and higher
lightness than other pennate subtypes and was composed of smaller I, IIA, and
IIX fibers than the bipennate and multipennate groups (p<0.05). Finally,
a different trend of muscle clustering by hierarchical cluster analysis was
found between physicochemical properties and muscle fiber characteristics. These
results suggest that the physicochemical properties and muscle fiber
characteristics of porcine skeletal muscles are not significantly dependent on
morphological properties but are rather related to the intrinsic properties of
the individual muscles.
Ethics approval (IRB/IACUC) (English)(This field may be published.) This manuscript does not require IRB/IACUC approval because there are no human and a nimal participants.
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