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Comparison between the three porcine RN genotypes for growth, carcass composition and meat quality traits

A three-step experimental design has been carried out to add evidence about the existence of the RN gene, with two segregating alleles RN(- )and rn(+), having major effects on meat quality in pigs, to estimate its effects on production traits and to map the RN locus. In the present article, the expe...

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Autores principales: Le Roy, Pascale, Elsen, Jean-Michel, Caritez, Jean-Claude, Talmant, André, Juin, Hervé, Sellier, Pierre, Monin, Gabriel
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2000
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2706868/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14736400
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1297-9686-32-2-165
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author Le Roy, Pascale
Elsen, Jean-Michel
Caritez, Jean-Claude
Talmant, André
Juin, Hervé
Sellier, Pierre
Monin, Gabriel
author_facet Le Roy, Pascale
Elsen, Jean-Michel
Caritez, Jean-Claude
Talmant, André
Juin, Hervé
Sellier, Pierre
Monin, Gabriel
author_sort Le Roy, Pascale
collection PubMed
description A three-step experimental design has been carried out to add evidence about the existence of the RN gene, with two segregating alleles RN(- )and rn(+), having major effects on meat quality in pigs, to estimate its effects on production traits and to map the RN locus. In the present article, the experimental population and sampling procedures are described and discussed, and effects of the three RN genotypes on growth and carcass traits are presented. The RN genotype had no major effect on growth performance and killing out percentage. Variables pertaining to carcass tissue composition showed that the RN(- )allele is associated with leaner carcasses (about 1 s.d. effect without dominance for back fat thickness, 0.5 s.d. effect with dominance for weights of joints). Muscle glycolytic potential (GP) was considerably higher in RN(- )carriers, with a maximum of a 6.85 s.d. effect for the live longissimus muscle GP. Physico-chemical characteristics of meat were also influenced by the RN genotype in a dominant way, ultimate pH differing by about 2 s.d. between homozygous genotypes and meat colour by about 1 s.d. Technological quality was also affected, with a 1 s.d. decrease in technological yield for RN(- )carriers. The RN genotype had a more limited effect on eating quality. On the whole, the identity between the acid meat condition and the RN(- )allele effect is clearly demonstrated (higher muscle GP, lower ultimate pH, paler meat and lower protein content), and the unfavourable relationship between GP and carcass lean to fat ratio is confirmed.
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spelling pubmed-27068682009-07-08 Comparison between the three porcine RN genotypes for growth, carcass composition and meat quality traits Le Roy, Pascale Elsen, Jean-Michel Caritez, Jean-Claude Talmant, André Juin, Hervé Sellier, Pierre Monin, Gabriel Genet Sel Evol Research A three-step experimental design has been carried out to add evidence about the existence of the RN gene, with two segregating alleles RN(- )and rn(+), having major effects on meat quality in pigs, to estimate its effects on production traits and to map the RN locus. In the present article, the experimental population and sampling procedures are described and discussed, and effects of the three RN genotypes on growth and carcass traits are presented. The RN genotype had no major effect on growth performance and killing out percentage. Variables pertaining to carcass tissue composition showed that the RN(- )allele is associated with leaner carcasses (about 1 s.d. effect without dominance for back fat thickness, 0.5 s.d. effect with dominance for weights of joints). Muscle glycolytic potential (GP) was considerably higher in RN(- )carriers, with a maximum of a 6.85 s.d. effect for the live longissimus muscle GP. Physico-chemical characteristics of meat were also influenced by the RN genotype in a dominant way, ultimate pH differing by about 2 s.d. between homozygous genotypes and meat colour by about 1 s.d. Technological quality was also affected, with a 1 s.d. decrease in technological yield for RN(- )carriers. The RN genotype had a more limited effect on eating quality. On the whole, the identity between the acid meat condition and the RN(- )allele effect is clearly demonstrated (higher muscle GP, lower ultimate pH, paler meat and lower protein content), and the unfavourable relationship between GP and carcass lean to fat ratio is confirmed. BioMed Central 2000-03-15 /pmc/articles/PMC2706868/ /pubmed/14736400 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1297-9686-32-2-165 Text en Copyright © 2000 INRA, EDP Sciences
spellingShingle Research
Le Roy, Pascale
Elsen, Jean-Michel
Caritez, Jean-Claude
Talmant, André
Juin, Hervé
Sellier, Pierre
Monin, Gabriel
Comparison between the three porcine RN genotypes for growth, carcass composition and meat quality traits
title Comparison between the three porcine RN genotypes for growth, carcass composition and meat quality traits
title_full Comparison between the three porcine RN genotypes for growth, carcass composition and meat quality traits
title_fullStr Comparison between the three porcine RN genotypes for growth, carcass composition and meat quality traits
title_full_unstemmed Comparison between the three porcine RN genotypes for growth, carcass composition and meat quality traits
title_short Comparison between the three porcine RN genotypes for growth, carcass composition and meat quality traits
title_sort comparison between the three porcine rn genotypes for growth, carcass composition and meat quality traits
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2706868/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14736400
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1297-9686-32-2-165
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