Poult. Sci.
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Poultry Science, Vol 84, Issue 1, 158-166
Copyright © 2005 by Poultry Science Association


Articles

Chemometric modeling to relate antioxidants, neutral lipid fatty acids, and flavor components in chicken breasts

K Jahan, A Paterson, J Piggott, and C Spickett

Department of Bioscience, University of Strathclyde, 204 George Street, Glasgow, G1 1XW, Scotland.

Relationships among quality factors in retailed free-range, corn-fed, organic, and conventional chicken breasts (9) were modeled using chemometric approaches. Use of principal component analysis (PCA) to neutral lipid composition data explained the majority (93%) of variability (variance) in fatty acid contents in 2 significant multivariate factors. PCA explained 88 and 75% variance in 3 factors for, respectively, flame ionization detection (FID) and nitrogen phosphorus (NPD) components in chromatographic flavor data from cooked chicken after simultaneous distillation extraction. Relationships to tissue antioxidant contents were modeled. Partial least square regression (PLS2), interrelating total data matrices, provided no useful models. By using single antioxidants as Y variables in PLS (1), good models (r2 values > 0.9) were obtained for alpha-tocopherol, glutathione, catalase, glutathione peroxidase, and reductase and FID flavor components and among the variables total mono and polyunsaturated fatty acids and subsets of FID, and saturated fatty acid and NPD components. Alpha-tocopherol had a modest (r2 = 0.63) relationship with neutral lipid n-3 fatty acid content. Such factors thus relate to flavor development and quality in chicken breast meat.





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Copyright © 2005 by the Poultry Science Association.