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Research article1999Peer reviewed

Combined effect of epinephrine and exercise on calpain/calpastatin and cathepsin B and L activity in porcine longissimus muscle

Ertbjerg, P; Henckel, P; Karlsson, A; Larsen, LM; Moller, AJ

Abstract

The objective of the study was to improve the understanding of the relationship between the effect of epinephrine plus exercise and meat tenderness. The calpain, calpastatin, and cathepsin B + L activities and postmortem proteolysis in porcine longissimus muscle were studied. The muscle glycogen stores were depleted in five pigs by s.c. injection of epinephrine (.3 mg/kg) at 15 h antemortem and exercise on a treadmill (5 min, 3.8 km/h) immediately before slaughter. Antemortem injection of epinephrine and treadmill exercise resulted in higher ultimate pH (6.32 vs 5.66 in control) and decreased (P < .05) thaw loss, cooking loss, and shear force values. The muscle energy depletion treatment increased (P < .05) the muscle mu-calpain activity measured 42 min postmortem, and at 24 h mu-calpain activity was still approximately 50% greater in the high ultimate pH group. Also, as the ratio of mu-calpain to calpastatin increased (P < .01), the overall proteolytic potential of the calpain system were greater. These observations suggest that the muscle energy level may influence the activity of the calpain system in the living animal. The high ultimate pH group showed lower (P < .001) cathepsin B + L activity in the myofibrillar and the soluble fractions after 8 d of storage, suggesting that the increased ultimate pH increased the stability of the lysosomal membrane and thereby reduced the release of cathepsins from the lysosomes during storage. The SDS-PAGE showed increased (P < .001) degradation of a 39-kDa band in. the epinephrine and exercise-treated samples. Degradation products at 30, 31, and 32 kDa were labeled by troponin-T antibody in western blot. An appearing 24-kDa band was identified as a troponin-I degradation product in western blot. The proteolytic degradation pattern of myofibrillar proteins during storage differed in control and treated samples, supporting the hypothesis that calpain-mediated proteolysis was affected after treatment, resulting in meat with high ultimate pH.

Keywords

pigs; calpain; cathepsins; epinephrine; proteolysis; tenderness

Published in

Journal of Animal Science
1999, Volume: 77, number: 9, pages: 2428-2436
Publisher: AMER SOC ANIMAL SCIENCE

    UKÄ Subject classification

    Food Science

    Permanent link to this page (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/85653