2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2006.07.004
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Changes in pork and shark (Rhizopriondon terraenovae) protein emulsions due to exogenous and endogenous proteolytic activity

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Cited by 13 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Similar patterns were reported by Mano et al (2002) and Golasz et al (2013) for chilled pork meat [35,9]. During storage, meat proteins are degraded by endogenous and microbial enzymes resulting in ammonia and amines, increasing pH [36,10]. This pH increase coincides with microbial counts (see below), and is consistent with the ΔE and visual color changes observed.…”
Section: Bef Performance On Sausage Deteriorationsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…Similar patterns were reported by Mano et al (2002) and Golasz et al (2013) for chilled pork meat [35,9]. During storage, meat proteins are degraded by endogenous and microbial enzymes resulting in ammonia and amines, increasing pH [36,10]. This pH increase coincides with microbial counts (see below), and is consistent with the ΔE and visual color changes observed.…”
Section: Bef Performance On Sausage Deteriorationsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…It is very important that the films change their color in a basic medium as most of the pathogenic bacteria grow in foods of neutral to alkaline pH like Shigella Lactobacilli, Salmonella Vibrio cholera . For example, storage of meat products leads to endogenous and microbial enzymes that degrade the proteins and produce amines and ammonia, which raise the pH (Barrientos et al., 2006). Our results are in agreement with Veiga‐Santos et al.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%