Meat and Muscle Biology (Aug 2017)

Breast Meat Quality and Protein Functionality of Broilers with Different Probiotic Levels and Cyclic Heat Challenge Exposure

  • Hyun-Wook Kim,
  • Traci Cramer,
  • Osamudiamen O. E. Ogbeifun,
  • Jin-Kyu Seo,
  • Feifei Yan,
  • Heng-Wei Cheng,
  • Yuan H. Brad Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.22175/mmb2017.01.0002
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 1
pp. 81 – 89

Abstract

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This study was performed to evaluate the effect of probiotic feeding level on meat quality and protein functionality of breast muscle from chickens exposed to cyclic heat challenge. A total of 180 one-d-old male chicks were randomly allocated in 36 floor pens. From Day 15, the birds were exposed to 32°C for 10 h daily until the end of the experiment (Day 46). Three dietary treatments containing different levels of probiotic (a mixture of 4 lactic acid bacteria, 5.0 × 10 cfu/g) were prepared; regular diet without probiotic (control), regular diet with 0.5 g of probiotic/kg feed (probiotic 0.5) and regular diet with 1.0 g of probiotic/kg feed (probiotic 1). Both breast muscles () were collected at 24 h postmortem, and the same side breast muscle was assigned to each experiment 1 (meat quality analysis, = 6) and 2 (protein functionality analysis, = 3). Probiotic feeding level did not affect initial pH and temperature declines ( > 0.05) of breast muscle until 6 h postmortem. However, the breast muscles from probiotic 1 group (5.92) showed a significantly higher ultimate pH than those from control (5.78) or probiotic 0.5 (5.82) groups at 24 h postmortem. No differences in chemical composition (moisture, protein, fat, ash, and phospholipids), water-holding capacity (cooking loss and display weight loss), shear force, and lipid oxidation stability were found in breast muscles from chickens exposed to cyclic heat challenge, regardless of probiotic levels ( > 0.05). An increase in probiotic level increased total protein solubility ( = 0.0004) and emulsion activity index of sarcoplasmic protein ( = 0.0032) of ground chicken breast. The results from the current study suggest that the supplementation of this commercial probiotic product could partially improve protein functionality of breast muscles from chickens exposed to cyclic heat challenge, in a dose-dependent manner within the applied level.