Litcius/Paper detail

Effects of Muscle Fiber Composition on Meat Quality, Flavor Characteristics, and Nutritional Traits in Lamb

Yu Fu, Yang Chen, Xuewen Han, Dandan Tan, Jinlin Chen, Cuiyu Lai, Xiaofan Yang, X. Y. Shan, L.H.P. Silva, Huaizhi Jiang

2025Foods11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Skeletal muscle fiber type composition critically influences lamb meat quality. This study examined the relationships between muscle fiber types and key quality traits, including tenderness, color, lipid and amino acid profiles, and volatile flavor compounds. MyHC I (slow-twitch oxidative fibers) positively correlated with desirable traits such as increased redness, water-holding capacity, unsaturated fatty acids, and essential amino acids. Conversely, MyHC IIb (fast glycolytic fibers) was linked to reduced tenderness and higher levels of off-flavor compounds. MyHC IIa and IIx showed minimal effects. Untargeted metabolomics comparing muscles with high versus low slow-twitch fiber proportions revealed differential metabolites enriched in sphingolipid and arginine-proline metabolism pathways. These results suggest that a higher proportion of oxidative fibers enhances both the sensory and nutritional qualities of lamb meat by modulating lipid metabolism, amino acid availability, and flavor formation.

Topics & Concepts

TendernessFlavorFood scienceChemistryLipid oxidationComposition (language)ArginineAmino acidBiochemistryMuscle fibreGlycolysisLipid metabolismMetabolismBiologyAntioxidantSkeletal muscleEndocrinologyPhilosophyLinguisticsMeat and Animal Product QualityAnimal Nutrition and PhysiologyMuscle metabolism and nutrition
Effects of Muscle Fiber Composition on Meat Quality, Flavor Characteristics, and Nutritional Traits in Lamb | Litcius