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The study compared the muscle fibre, size, its characteristics as well as rhelogical properties of selected muscles: m. quadriceps femoris (QF), m. biceps femoris (BF), m. semimembranosus (SM), m. semitendinosus (ST), and m. longissimus (L) of wild boars of different carcass weight (30±2 and 70±3 kg SD). Muscle fibre cross-section areas and percentages of different fibre types: I (slow oxidative), IIA (fast oxidative-glycolytic) and IIB (fast glycolytic) per muscle fibre bundle, were measured using a computer image analysis program. The relaxation test was used to determine rheological properties and the results were interpreted with a 5-element Maxwell body model. The ST of wild boars was found to contain the highest percentage of type I fibres rather than fibres of IIA, compared to the other muscles tested. A higher percentage of type I fibres was also typical of BF and L, both in young and old wild boars. The lowest percentage of type I and the highest percentage of type IIB fibres were found in QF and SM. Growth rate influences muscle fibre properties in all muscles; those of old wild boars were found to contain a higher percentage of type I fibres and a lower percentage of type IIB fibres compared to the same muscles of juvenile wild boars, whereas the percentage of type IIA fibres was about the same in the muscles of both wild boar groups tested. Of the all wild boar muscles, the highest mean fibre cross-section area was found in BF and ST, the lowest - in QF and L, whereas the cross-sectional area of I and IIB fibres were markedly larger than the cross-sectional area of type IIA. The mean cross-sectional area of all fibre types increased together with increased growth rate and the largest muscle fibre cross-section areas were in the old wild boars’ muscles. Of the all wild boar muscles tested, the highest sum of elastic moduli was found in L muscles, while the lowest was typical of QF and BF. Meat obtained from wild boar juveniles, compared to old wild boars, indicated lower values of E0 and higher E1 and E2 elasticity moduli, whereas m1 and m1 viscous moduli values were not dependent on carcass weight.
The discipline of meat science has classically focused on ante-mortem and post-mortem handling procedures that effect ultimate meat quality. Furthermore, meat science has also ventured into genetic and physiological factors that impact ultimate meat quality. However, in general, meat scientists have not fully considered the impact of embryonic development nor have they targeted the embryo in strategies aimed at optimizing meat quality. Embryonic development has a profound impact on ultimate meat yield and meat quality because embryonic events program muscle phenotype, muscle growth potential, ultimate muscle size, and muscle metabolic potential. In farm animals, myofiber size, contractile protein composition, and myofiber phenotype have a profound impact on eating quality. During development, gastrulation begins when the blastoderm invaginates to form the endoderm, mesoderm, and the ectoderm. The somites, derived from the mesoderm, are the classically accepted site of myogenesis. The underlying mechanisms governing myogenesis, regulating myofiber number, and determining myofiber phenotype are not yet fully understood. The focus of this manuscript is to review the general embryonic mechanisms governing muscle development and to speculate about potential targets to improve meat quality through embryonic manipulation.
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