AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzed how varying dietary energy levels affected ruminal bacteria, meat quality, and their relationship in yak muscle during the cold season.
  • Fifteen castrated yaks were divided into three groups (low, medium, high energy diets), and the high energy group showed increased water and fat content in the muscle, while also having lower shear force, indicating improved tenderness.
  • The results indicated that higher energy diets boosted populations of specific bacteria in the rumen, which helped enhance meat quality by promoting fatty acid synthesis in the yak's muscle.

Article Abstract

The effects of different dietary energy levels on the ruminal bacterial population, selected meat quality indices, and their relationship in yak (LT) muscle were assessed in this study. A total of 15 castrated yaks were randomly assigned to three groups with low- (NEg: 5.5 MJ/Kg, LE), medium- (NEg: 6.2 MJ/Kg, ME), and high- (NEg: 6.9 MJ/Kg, HE) dietary energy levels and occurred in the cold season (March to May). All yaks from each treatment group were humanely slaughtered and sampled on the day of completion of their feeding treatment. The results showed that the water content and crude fat levels of the LT muscle were markedly elevated in the HE group ( < 0.05), while the shear force was drastically reduced ( = 0.001). Methionine, aspartic acid, and glycine levels in the LT muscle were higher in the LE group compared with the ME and HE groups ( < 0.05). The glutamic acid level in the ME group was greater in comparison to the LE and HE groups ( < 0.05), while the histidine level in the ME group was higher than that in the HE group ( < 0.05). Additionally, the HE diet significantly elevated ( < 0.05) the abundance of carbohydrate metabolism-associated bacteria including in the rumen. The results of the Spearman's rank correlation analysis showed that the abundance of and showed a significant influence on the indicator of IMF and SF. In conclusion, a high dietary energy level improved the meat quality in the LT muscle of yak mainly by increasing the relative abundance of ruminal amylolytic bacteria to provide substrates for fatty acid synthesis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8492897PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2021.718036DOI Listing

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