This suggests a high peroxide value in the endogenous lipids (∼100 mmol/kg lipid). In addition, proteins may also carry peroxides equal to 3–22 mmol/kg of protein ( Salminen and Heinonen, 2008). Proteins damaged by free radicals in the presence of oxygen can yield relatively long-lived protein peroxides ( Davies et al., 1995 and Gebicki and Gebicki, 1993), which have been shown to readily degrade to free radicals
upon reaction with iron (II) complex. It is therefore necessary to include them in an assay for hydroperoxide measurements, in particularly in lean meat where the lipid content is low relative to the protein content. With sufficient amounts of efficient antioxidants, meat should be a homoeostatic system which remains reduced p38 MAPK signaling pathway or without oxidised compounds and reactive components. The aim of this study was: (1) to set up a new model system for measuring
total hydroperoxide values of lean meat and the reactivity of lean meat towards liposomes, C646 datasheet (2) to discover if the lipid peroxides were always dominant over the protein-bound peroxides, (3) to investigate whether the peroxides were stable when incubated over time and at different pH values, (4) to establish the hydroperoxide formation ability in some Norwegian regular diet meats. Chicken muscles (Musculus pectoralis major) were collected on the day of slaughter from a hot boning line, vacuum-packed and frozen at −80 °C. The chicken-SO group was
chicken fed with a wheat-based diet containing 4% soybean oil and 0.003% selenium-enriched yeast (-)-p-Bromotetramisole Oxalate (Ultra Bio-logics., Inc., O.S.Y. 2000× containing 2.15 g Se/kg), whereas the chicken-LO group was fed with a wheat-based diet with 2.4% linseed oil, 1.6% rapeseed oil, and 0.04% selenium yeast. Beef muscles (Musculus semimembranosus) were obtained on the day of slaughter from a hot boning line, vacuum-packed and frozen at −40 °C until they could be brought to −80 °C (after 5 days). Pork muscles (Musculus gluteus medius) were collected 1 day after slaughter from the cold boning line, vacuum-packed, and frozen at −80 °C. The pig group was homogeneous, as all pigs were of the crossbreed Noroc that was produced to give higher intramuscular fat content than the regular Norwegian Landrace/Yorkshire crossbreed. All the pig samples were from the same farm. Lamb muscles (Musculus psoas major) were obtained 1 day after slaughter from a cold boning line, vacuum-packed, frozen at −40 °C until they could be brought to −80 °C (after 5 days). Each group contained 10 animals. These beef (M. semimembranosus), pork (M. gluteus medius) and lamb (M. psoas major) muscles were randomly chosen from different Norwegian feeding farms from a local meat supplier (Nortura SA, Lillehammer, Norway). l-α-Phosphatidylcholine 95% (egg, chicken) powder was purchased from Avanti Polar Lipids, Inc., (Alabaster, USA).