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Genotype with nutrition interaction on fatty acid composition of intramuscular fat and the relationship with flavour of pig meat
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The proportion of neutral lipid in the LGA line was lower (0.64 v 0.75, sed 0.03) while the polyunsaturated : saturated (P:S) ratio of the LFC line (0.53 v 0.41, sed 0.05) was higher than the control line and other selection lines. The DFI line had a higher phospholipid n-6:n-3 ratio than other selection lines (14 v 11, sed 1.0).
Diets C and E resulted in lower neutral lipid : phospholipid ratio (0.7 v 0.8, sed 0.01), n-6:n-3 ratios for both neutral lipid (5 v 13, sed 0.8) and phospholipids (7 v 20, sed 0.6) and a higher P:S ratio (0.5 v 0.3, sed 0.03) for neutral lipid than diet A.
Neutral fatty acids C18:2 n-6, C18:3 n-3, C20:3 n-6, C20:4 n-6, C20:5 n-3, C22:5 n-3 and C22:6 n-3 were negatively correlated with pork flavour (-0.30, se 0.10), flavour liking (-0.33) and overall acceptability (-0.30). In contrast, the fatty acids C16:1, C18:1 w9 and C 18:1 w11 were positively correlated with pork flavour (0.36), flavour liking (0.39) and overall acceptability (0.40). However, correlations for fatty acids in the phospholipid class were positive for C18:2 n-6, C20:4 n-6 and C22:4 n-6 with pork flavour (0.33), flavour liking (0.23) and overall acceptability (0.23). The proportion of neutral lipid had non-significant correlations with flavour traits; pork flavour (0.01), abnormal flavour (0.08), flavour liking (-0.03) and overall acceptability (0.03).
The selection lines responded in a similar manner to the different diets, such
that there was little evidence for genotype with nutrition interactions for
fatty acid concentrations of neutral lipids and phospholipids. Selection for
high lean growth will reduce intramuscular fat, but the increased relative
amount of phospholipid and concentration of polyunsaturated fatty acids
are unlikely to reduce eating quality. Nutritional effects on intramuscular fat
characteristics were greater than genetic effects, such that nutritional
approaches to feeding pigs will provide effective methods of reducing
n-6:n-3 fatty acid ratio of human dietary fat from pigmeat and improving
human health.
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