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48 results on '"Gerrard DE"'

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1. In vitro proteolysis mirrors intact muscle maturation in beef carcasses.

2. Effects of liquid-based diets with breweries grains enriched with isolated starch and fish oil on veal quality.

3. Inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase accelerates anaerobic glycolysis under postmortem simulating conditions.

4. Muscle proteolysis is differentially influenced by mitochondrial intactness.

5. Challenges and opportunities of using Bos indicus cattle to meet consumers' demand for quality beef.

6. Muscle of dark and normal beef differs metabolically.

7. Time of dehairing alters pork quality development.

8. Ractopamine does not rescue Halothane and Rendement Napole metabolism postmortem.

9. Exploratory lipidome and metabolome profiling contributes to understanding differences in high and normal ultimate pH beef.

10. Reduced scald time does not influence ultimate pork quality.

11. Inherent factors influence color variations in semimembranosus muscle of pigs.

12. Feeding strategies impact animal growth and beef color and tenderness.

13. Using TD-NMR relaxometry and 1D 1 H NMR spectroscopy to evaluate aging of Nellore beef.

14. Ractopamine changes in pork quality are not mediated by changes in muscle glycogen or lactate accumulation postmortem.

15. Mitochondria influence glycolytic and tricarboxylic acid cycle metabolism under postmortem simulating conditions.

16. Muscle from grass- and grain-fed cattle differs energetically.

17. Presence of oxygen and mitochondria in skeletal muscle early postmortem.

18. Mitochondrial F 1 -ATPase extends glycolysis and pH decline in an in vitro model.

19. A mitochondrial protein increases glycolytic flux.

20. Muscle characteristics only partially explain color variations in fresh hams.

21. Excess glycogen does not resolve high ultimate pH of oxidative muscle.

22. Net lactate accumulation and low buffering capacity explain low ultimate pH in the longissimus lumborum of AMPKγ3 R200Q mutant pigs.

23. Mitochondria influence postmortem metabolism and pH in an in vitro model.

24. Altered AMP deaminase activity may extend postmortem glycolysis.

25. pH inactivation of phosphofructokinase arrests postmortem glycolysis.

26. Moisture absorption early postmortem predicts ultimate drip loss in fresh pork.

27. Contribution of the phosphagen system to postmortem muscle metabolism in AMP-activated protein kinase γ3 R200Q pig Longissimus muscle.

28. Exploring the unknowns involved in the transformation of muscle to meat.

29. Use of dietary supplementation with β-guanidinopropionic acid to alter the muscle phosphagen system, postmortem metabolism, and pork quality.

30. High glycolytic potential does not predict low ultimate pH in pork.

31. Lessons to learn about postmortem metabolism using the AMPKγ3(R200Q) mutation in the pig.

32. Imaging optical diffuse reflectance in beef muscles for tenderness prediction.

33. Compound C, an inhibitor of AMP-activated protein kinase, inhibits glycolysis in mouse longissimus dorsi postmortem.

34. Mechanisms controlling pork quality development: The biochemistry controlling postmortem energy metabolism.

35. Microbial heat resistance of Listeria monocytogenes and the impact on ready-to-eat meat quality after post-package pasteurization.

36. Augmented postmortem glycolysis does not occur early postmortem in AMPKγ3-mutated porcine muscle of halothane positive pigs.

37. Myosin heavy chain isoform composition influences the susceptibility of actin-activated S1 ATPase and myofibrillar ATPase to pH inactivation.

38. Influence of myosin heavy chain isoform expression and postmortem metabolism on the ATPase activity of muscle fibers.

39. Myosin heavy chain isoforms influence myofibrillar ATPase activity under simulated postmortem pH, calcium, and temperature conditions.

40. Method of isolation, rate of postmortem metabolism, and myosin heavy chain isoform composition influence ATPase activity of isolated porcine myofibrils.

41. Determination of animal skeletal maturity by image processing.

42. Early postmortem electrical stimulation simulates PSE pork development.

43. Myosin heavy chain isoforms account for variation in pork quality.

44. Quantification of myosin heavy chain isoform in porcine muscle using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.

45. Evaluation of pork color by using computer vision.

46. Effects of electrical stimulation on early postmortem muscle pH and temperature declines in pigs from different genetic lines and halothane genotypes.

47. Effect of halothane genotype on porcine meat quality and myoglobin autoxidation.

48. Utilization of image processing to quantitate surface metmyoglobin on fresh beef.

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