Reprint

Recent Advances in OMICs Technologies and Application for Ensuring Meat Quality, Safety and Authenticity

Edited by
January 2023
220 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5665-9 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5666-6 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Recent Advances in OMICs Technologies and Application for Ensuring Meat Quality, Safety and Authenticity that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Chemistry & Materials Science
Engineering
Public Health & Healthcare
Summary

Consumers and stakeholders are increasingly demanding that the meat industry guarantees high-quality meat products with stable and acceptable sensory and safety properties. To do this, it is necessary to understand the mechanisms that underlie the conversion of muscle into meat, as well as the impact of pre- and post-harvest procedures on the final quality and safety of meat products. Over the last two decades, sophisticated OMICs technologies—genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, peptidomics, metabolomics and lipidomics, also known as foodomics—have been powerful approaches that extended the scope of traditional methods and have established impressive possibilities of addressing meat quality issues. Foodomics were further used to elucidate the biological basis/mechanisms of phenotypic variation in the technological and sensory quality traits of meat from different species. Overall, these techniques aimed to comprehensively study the dynamic link(s) between the genome and the quality traits of the meat that we eat compared to traditional methods, hence improving both the accuracy and sensitivity thanks to the large quantities of data that can be generated. This Special Issue focused on the cutting-edge research applications of OMICs tools to characterize or manage the quality of muscle foods. The research papers applied transcriptomics, targeted and untargeted proteomics, metabolomics, and genomics, among others, to evaluate meat quality, determine the molecular profiles of meat and meat products, discover and/or evaluate biomarkers of meat quality traits, and to characterize the safety, adulteration, and authenticity of meat and meat products.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© by the authors
Keywords
sea bream; fish; spoilage; metabolomics; multivariate analysis; biomarkers; meat tenderness; fat; proteomics; proteins; enzymes; quantification; biological pathways; chemometrics; wooden breast; myopathy; proteomics; feed efficiency; upstream regulator analysis; foodomics; beef tenderness; bovine biomarkers; muscle; proteome; liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS); septuple PCR; adulteration; meat species; mitochondrial genes; multiplex PCR; cellular compartments; protein extractability; sarcoplasmic proteins; myofibrillar proteins; meat quality biomarkers; DFD meat; oxidative stress; proteomics; certified reference material; digital PCR; duck interleukin 2; mitochondrial gene; meat adulteration; ovine; color stability; enzyme; proteomics; bioinformatics; intensive management; extensive management; mixing unfamiliar animals; myofibrillar proteins; pre-slaughter stress; protein biomarkers; sheep; tenderness; novel isoforms; alternative splicing; CTCF; Iso-seq; ChIP-seq; DNA metabarcoding; animal species; species identification; NGS; food adulteration; validation; interlaboratory ring trial; n/a