Connecting Heat Tolerance and Tenderness in Influenced Cattle.

Animals (Basel)

Department of Animal Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA.

Published: January 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cattle in tropical and subtropical climates are valued for their heat tolerance and resistance to parasites, essential for beef production, but issues like excitable behavior and slow growth hinder their commercial use.
  • The quality of meat is affected by skeletal muscle properties and the conditions during slaughter, indicating that heat adaptation may compromise tenderness and other quality traits.
  • Key cellular processes, including protein degradation and mitochondrial function, are crucial for understanding how these adaptations impact meat quality and tenderness in cattle.

Article Abstract

cattle are widely utilized in tropical and subtropical climates. Their heat tolerance and parasite resistance are integral for beef production in these regions; however, a reputation for excitable temperaments, slower growth, and variation in tenderness has limited their use in commercial beef production. This suggests that there is antagonism between heat tolerance and meat production traits. Meat quality characteristics are determined by the properties of skeletal muscle as well as conditions during slaughter and processing. Thus, it is possible that adaptations related to heat tolerance in the living animal affect tenderness and other meat quality attributes. Since muscle represents a large proportion of body mass, relatively small changes at the cellular level could impact overall heat production of the animal. Specifically, protein degradation and mitochondria function are aspects of organ and cellular metabolism that may help limit heat production and also have a connection to tenderness. Protein degradation postmortem is critical to structural changes that enhance tenderness whereas mitochondria may influence tenderness through their roles in energy metabolism, calcium regulation, cell death signaling, and oxidative stress. This review explores potential relationships between cellular metabolism in vivo and beef quality development in and influenced cattle.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8833572PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12030220DOI Listing

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