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2                  Natural Antioxidants: Applications in Foods of Animal Origin
  VetBooks.ir  ABSTRACT




            Lipid and myoglobin oxidations significantly impair the quality of foods of
            animal origin because these reactions deteriorate flavor and color, induce the
            loss of nutritional value and cause technological problems during processing.
            Lipid and myoglobin oxidations are coupled and such reactions can occur
            via non-enzymatic and enzymatic routes. Several factors have been reported
            to enhance the oxidation of lipid in muscle foods including species, muscle
            type, fatty acid composition, endogenous antioxidants (AH), temperature,
            metal ions, sodium chloride, muscle pH, and processing parameters. It is most
            likely that the prooxidant effect of heme proteins, especially myoglobin, is
            a prime factor influencing the lipid oxidation in muscle foods. On the other
            hand, lipid oxidation results in a wide range of aldehyde products, which
            can cause the oxidation of myoglobin. The interaction between myoglobin
            and aldehydic lipid oxidation products can alter myoglobin redox stability
            and finally results in muscle discoloration. As a consequence, the oxidation
            of both lipid and myoglobin directly affect the quality and acceptability of
            muscle foods and those reactions seems to promote each other.



            1.1 INTRODUCTION

            The problems associated with oxidation in foods of animal origin, partic-
            ularly meat and muscle foods, have gained much interest as they relate to
            flavor deterioration, discoloration, loss of nutritional value and safety, biolog-
            ical damage, ageing, and functional property changes. Meat and other muscle
            foods are complex foods with highly structured nutritional compositions
            (Rodriguez-Estrada et al., 1997). Muscles are composed of water, proteins,
            lipids, carbohydrates, vitamins, and minerals in variable amounts depending
            on several factors such as breeds, muscle types, dietary, and growth perfor-
            mance (Wattanachant et al., 2005). Oxidation is a major cause of quality dete-
            rioration for a variety of raw and processed muscle foods during handling,
            processing, and storage. Lipid, protein, pigment, and vitamin in muscle tissue
            are susceptible to oxidative reactions. These changes resulted from reactions
            of active oxygen species, free radicals, enzymes, and prooxidants with unsat-
            urated fatty acids in lipids, amino acids in proteins, heme groups in pigments
            and the chains in vitamins with conjugated double bonds. However, lipid
            oxidation and the oxidation of heme proteins, particularly myoglobin, in
            muscle foods are major deteriorative reactions which occur in a concurrent
            manner and each process appears to enhance the other. During oxidation of
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