Linoleic acid metabolic pathway allows for an efficient increase of intramuscular fat content in pigs

Autor/a

Gol, Sofia

González Prendes, Rayner

Bosch, Lluís

Tor i Naudí, Marc

Reixach, Josep

Pena i Subirà, Ramona Natacha

Estany Illa, Joan

Fecha de publicación

2019-10-10T12:17:06Z

2019-10-10T12:17:06Z

2019-05-07



Resumen

Background: Intramuscular fat (IMF) content is a relevant trait for high-quality meat products such as dry-cured ham, but increasing IMF has the undesirable correlated effect of decreasing lean growth. Thus, there is a need to find selection criteria for IMF independent from lean growth. In pigs, the proportion of linoleic (C18:2) and arachidonic (C20:4) acids decline with fat deposition and therefore they can be considered as indicators of fatness. The aim of this research was to estimate the genetic variation for C18:2 and C20:4 in IMF and their genetic correlations with IMF and lean growth traits, with the objective to assess their potential as specific biomarkers of IMF. The analysis was conducted using a full-pedigreed Duroc resource line with 91,448 records of body weight and backfat thickness (BT) at 180 days of age and 1371 records of fatty acid composition in the muscle gluteus medius. Results: The heritability estimates for C18:2 and C20:4 in IMF, whether expressed in absolute (mg/g of muscle) or in relative (mg/g of fatty acid) terms, as well as for their ratio (C20:4/C18:2), were high (> 0.40), revealing that the C18:2 to C20:4 pathway is subjected to substantial genetic influence. Litter effects were not negligible, with values ranging from 8% to 15% of the phenotypic variance. The genetic correlations of C18:2 and C20:4 with IMF and BT were negative (− 0.75 to − 0.66, for IMF, and − 0.64 to − 0.36, for BT), if expressed in relative values, but almost null (− 0.04 to 0.07), if expressed in absolute values, except for C18:2 with IMF, which was highly positive (0.88). The ratio of C20:4 to C18:2 also displayed a stronger genetic correlation with IMF (− 0.59) than with BT (− 0.10). Conclusions: The amount of C18:2 in muscle can be used as an IMF-specific biomarker. Selection for the absolute amount of C18:2 is expected to deliver a similar response outcome as selection for IMF at restrained BT. Further genetic analysis of the C18:2 metabolic pathway may provide new insights into differential fat deposition among adipose tissues and on candidate genes for molecular markers targeting specifically for one of them.


This research has received funding from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness and the European Union Regional Development Funds (AGL2015–65846-R grant) and was partially supported by the Centre for the Development of Industrial Technology (IDI-20150115 project). SG is recipient of a PhD scholarship from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (BES-2014-FPU13/04975).

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Artículo
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Inglés

Materias y palabras clave

Greix intramuscular; Paràmetres genètics; Arachidonic; Linoleic; Carn--Qualitat; Porcs

Publicado por

BMC (part of Springer Nature)

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info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MINECO//AGL2015-65846-R/ES/REGULACION NUTRIGENETICA DEL CONTENIDO Y LA COMPOSICION DE LA GRASA EN EL CERDO/

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1186/s40104-019-0343-8

Journal of Animal Science and Biotechnology, 2019, vol. 10, núm. 1, article number 33

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cc-by (c) Gol et al., 2019

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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