Dietary linseed oil supplemented with organic selenium improved the fatty acid nutritional profile, muscular selenium deposition, water retention, and tenderness of fresh pork

Jiang Jiang, Xinyue Tang, Yan Xue, Gang Lin, Youling L. Xiong

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

77 Scopus citations

Abstract

Cross-bred pigs were fed a control diet (with 0.3 ppm sodium selenite and 1.5% soybean oil) or organic selenium diets (0.3 ppm Se-Yeast with 1.5% soybean or linseed oil) to investigate nutrient supplement effects on meat quality and oxidative stability. The organic selenium diets increased muscular selenium content up to 54%, and linseed oil increased n-3 fatty acids two-fold while lowering the n-6/n-3 fatty acid ratio from 13.9 to 5.9 over the selenite control diet (P < 0.05). Organic selenium yeast treatments with linseed oil reduced pork drip loss by 58–74% when compared with diets with soybean oil. Lightness of fresh pork was slightly less for organic selenium groups than inorganic (P < 0.05), but redness was mostly similar. Lipid oxidation (TBARS) and protein oxidation (sulfhydryl) during meat storage (4 °C up to 6 days) showed no appreciable difference (P > 0.05) between diets, in agreement with the lack of notable difference in endogenous antioxidant enzyme activity between these meat groups.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)99-106
Number of pages8
JournalMeat Science
Volume131
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 1 2017

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Elsevier Ltd

Keywords

  • Antioxidant enzymes
  • N-3 fatty acids
  • Nutrition
  • Pork
  • Selenium

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Food Science

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Dietary linseed oil supplemented with organic selenium improved the fatty acid nutritional profile, muscular selenium deposition, water retention, and tenderness of fresh pork'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this