Supranutritional selenium level affects fatty acid composition and oxidative stability of chicken breast muscle tissue

Summary A total of 128 broilers were used to investigate the effect of selenium (Se) on fatty acid (FA) composition and oxidative stability of lipids in the breast muscle tissue. There were 4 replicates of 4 dietary treatments: T1 (basal diet with no added Se), T2 (T1 with 0.15 mg Se added per kg di...

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Published inJournal of animal physiology and animal nutrition Vol. 96; no. 3; pp. 385 - 394
Main Authors Pappas, A. C., Zoidis, E., Papadomichelakis, G., Fegeros, K.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.06.2012
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
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Summary:Summary A total of 128 broilers were used to investigate the effect of selenium (Se) on fatty acid (FA) composition and oxidative stability of lipids in the breast muscle tissue. There were 4 replicates of 4 dietary treatments: T1 (basal diet with no added Se), T2 (T1 with 0.15 mg Se added per kg diet), T3 (T1 with 0.3 mg Se added per kg diet) and T4 (T1 with 3.0 mg Se added per kg diet). A yeast source was used for added Se. Breast muscle tissue was collected from two chickens per replicate pen for the determination of Se concentration by ICP‐MS, FA profile by GC and lipid oxidation using thiobarbituric acid reactive substances method. Addition of supranutritional Se levels to chicken diets leads to the production of Se‐enriched meat. Consumption of 100 g of breast meat from chickens fed diets supplemented with 0.15, 0.3 and 3 mg Se per kg of diet can provide 26, 41 and 220 μg of Se, respectively. Long‐chain polyunsaturated fatty acids namely C20:3n‐6, C20:4n‐6, C20:5n‐3, C22:5n‐3 and C22:6n‐3 increased linearly (p = 0.047, p < 0.001, p = 0.023, p = 0.003 and p = 0.002, respectively) as the Se inclusion levels in the diets increased. At slaughter, a linear decrease in lipid oxidation (p = 0.019) was observed with Se addition, possibly attributed to the antioxidant properties of Se. Addition of supranutritional Se to chicken diets, at levels well below those causing toxicity, leads to production of Se‐enriched meat, protection of health‐promoting long‐chain FA like C20:5n‐3 and C22:6n‐3 and protection of meat quality from oxidation at day 1 after slaughter.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-1NLSMV2V-X
istex:808C194941B3876C0667EF798616D8F0ECAA7427
ArticleID:JPN1152
ISSN:0931-2439
1439-0396
DOI:10.1111/j.1439-0396.2011.01152.x