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TEMPERATURE ACCLIMATION OF ATLANTIC COD (GADUS MORHUA) AND ITS INFLUENCE ON FREEZING POINT AND BIOCHEMICAL DAMAGE OF POSTMORTEM MUSCLE DURING STORAGE AT 0° and -3°C
Authors:MV SIMPSON  NF HAARD
Affiliation:Department of Biochemistry Memorial University of Newfoundland St. John's, Newfoundland, CANADA A1B3X9
Abstract:The freezing point of muscle fluid from Newfoundland Atlantic cod held at ambient sea water temperature was as low as - 1.30°C in March and as high as - 0.80°C in July. Muscle fluid from cod held live at 0°C for 3 weeks had a freezing point of - 1.02°C in contrast to a muscle fluid freezing point of - 0.90°C for cod acclimated at 10°C prior to sacrifice. Muscle fluid from cold acclimated cod exhibited 0.40°C thermal hysteresis indicating freezing point depression was influenced by antifreeze substances. The following indices of deterioration were measured in muscle sections stored at 0°C or - 3°C for 21 days: extractable protein (EP), free drip (FD), extracellular area (EA), trimethylamineoxide (TMAO), trimethylamine (TMA), dimethylamine (DMA), free amino acids (AA), and pH. Muscle sections at the anterior end of fillets, from myotomes 9–20, prepared using aseptic technique and treated with antibiotic showed less evidence of biochemical deterioration: (a) when stored at - 3°C compared to 0°C with respect to EP, AA, EA; (b) when prepared from fish acclimated at 0°C compared to at 10°C and stored at 0°C or - 3°C with respect to EP, EA, FD, AA. Negligible changes in pH, TMA and DMA occurred during 21 days storage at either temperature. TMAO decreased more during storage at-3°C than at 0°C.
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