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Oxidation of muscle phospholipids in relation to their fatty acid composition with emphasis on volatile compounds

✍ Scribed by Meynier, A; Genot, C; Gandemer, G


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
107 KB
Volume
79
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-5142

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✦ Synopsis


The impact of moderate changes of fatty acid (FA) composition of phospholipids (PL) on their oxidative stability and on volatile pro®les remains largely unknown. PL of breast muscle of turkeys fed a diet containing 6% tallow, rapeseed oil or soya oil were puri®ed and prepared as liposomes. After 24 h of incubation at 25 °C with iron/ascorbate, oxidation was quanti®ed by measurement of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBA-RS) and volatile compounds. TBA-RS level was the lowest (21.4 nmole eq MDA mg À1 PL) in PL from tallow-fed animals but was not signi®cantly different (P b 0.05) in soya oil (30.9 nmole eq MDA mg À1 PL) and rapeseed oil (30.3 nmole eq MDA mg À1 PL) batches. ANOVA did not clearly distinguish between the three groups according to the quantities of individual volatiles except for Z,E-2,4-heptadienal. In contrast, principal component analysis (PCA) performed on standardised quantities of volatile compounds distinguished unambiguously the three groups. Axis 1 was positively correlated with volatile compounds arising from oxidation of n-6 fatty acids, and negatively with compounds of n-9 origin. Axis 2 was highly positively correlated with compounds from n-3 origin. Only a few compounds from each origin (n-6, n-3, n-9) had an atypical behaviour. A weak modi®cation of the FA composition of PL led to concomitant modi®cations of the quantities of volatile compounds generated through oxidation, which were emphasised by multivariate analysis (PCA).