AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored how high ambient temperatures impact meat quality and nutrient metabolism in finishing pigs.
  • 24 pigs were divided into three groups to assess the effects of different temperatures and feeding conditions over 30 days.
  • Results indicated that high temperatures and reduced feed intake led to poorer growth performance and meat quality, with significant changes in gene expression related to muscle development, energy metabolism, and stress responses.

Article Abstract

Background: The mechanism of high ambient temperature affecting meat quality is not clear till now. This study investigated the effect of high ambient temperature on meat quality and nutrition metabolism in finishing pigs.

Methods: All pigs received the same corn-soybean meal diet. A total of 24 Landrace × Large White pigs (60 kg BW, all were female) were assigned to three groups: 22AL (fed ad libitum at 22 °C), 35AL (ad libitum fed at 35 °C), and 22PF (at 22 °C, but fed the amount consumed by pigs raised at 35 °C) and the experiment lasted for 30 days.

Results: Feed intake, weight gain, and intramuscular fat (IMF) content of pigs were reduced, both directly by high temperature and indirectly through reduced feed intake. Transcriptome analysis of longissimus dorsi (LM) showed that downregulated genes caused by feed restriction were mainly involved in muscle development and energy metabolism; and upregulated genes were mainly involved in response to nutrient metabolism or extracellular stimulus. Apart from the direct effects of feed restriction, high temperature negatively affected the muscle structure and development, energy, or catabolic metabolism, and upregulated genes were mainly involved in DNA or protein damage or recombination, cell cycle process or biogenesis, stress response, or immune response.

Conclusion: Both high temperature and reduced feed intake affected growth performance and meat quality. Apart from the effects of reducing feed intake, high temperature per se negatively downregulated cell cycle and upregulated heat stress response. High temperature also decreased the energy or catabolic metabolism level through PPAR signaling pathway.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6657146PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12263-019-0643-9DOI Listing

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