Creatine Monohydrate Enhances Energy Status ... - ACS Publications

Aug 2, 2017 - Creatine monohydrate (CMH) contributes to reduce transport-induced muscle rapid glycolysis and improve meat quality of broilers, but the...
1 downloads 0 Views 1MB Size
Subscriber access provided by Queen Mary, University of London

Article

Creatine Monohydrate Enhances Energy Status and Reduces Glycolysis via Inhibition of AMPK Pathway in Pectoralis Major Muscle of Transport-stressed Broilers Lin Zhang, Xiaofei Wang, Jiaolong Li, Xudong Zhu, Feng Gao, and Guanghong Zhou J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.7b02740 • Publication Date (Web): 02 Aug 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on August 3, 2017

Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.

Page 1 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

1

Creatine Monohydrate Enhances Energy Status and Reduces Glycolysis

2

via Inhibition of AMPK Pathway in Pectoralis Major Muscle of

3

Transport-stressed Broilers

4 5

Lin Zhang,† Xiaofei Wang,†,‡ Jiaolong Li,† Xudong Zhu,†,‡ Feng Gao,*,† Guanghong

6

Zhou†

7 8



9

Origin Food Production and Safety Guarantee, Jiangsu Key Laboratory of

10

Gastrointestinal Nutrition and Animal Health, Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation

11

Center of Meat Production and Processing, Quality and Safety Control, Nanjing

12

Agricultural University, Nanjing, Jiangsu 210095, China

13



College of Animal Science and Technology, Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Animal

College of Science, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing, Jiangsu 210095, China

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

14

ABSTRACT: Creatine monohydrate (CMH) contributes to reduce transport-induced

15

muscle rapid glycolysis and improve meat quality of broilers, but the underlying

16

mechanism is still unknown. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate the molecular

17

mechanisms underlying the ameliorative effects of CMH on muscle glycolysis

18

metabolism of transported broilers during summer. The results showed that 3-h

19

transport during summer elevated chicken live weight loss and plasma corticosterone

20

concentration, decreased muscle concentrations of ATP, creatine and energy charge

21

value, increased muscle AMP concentration and AMP/ATP ratio, upregulated muscle

22

mRNA expression of LKB1 and AMPKα2, as well as protein expression of

23

p-LKB1Thr189 and p-AMPKαThr172, which subsequently resulted in rapid glycolysis in

24

the pectoralis major muscle and consequent reduction of meat quality. Dietary

25

addition of CMH at 1200 mg/kg ameliorated transport-induced rapid muscle

26

glycolysis and reduction of meat quality via enhancement of the energy-buffering

27

capacity of intramuscular phosphocreatine/creatine system and inhibition of AMPK

28

pathway.

29

KEYWORDS: broiler, transport, creatine monohydrate, energy status, glycolysis

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 2 of 36

Page 3 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

30

INTRODUCTION

31

In poultry industry, market-age broilers are inevitably transported from farms to

32

slaughterhouses, which has been reported to result in poor welfare, physiological and

33

metabolic changes.1-3 More importantly, pre-slaughter transport during hot summer

34

have also brought huge economic losses owing to the increases in injuries, mortality,

35

live weight loss, and poor meat quality.4-7 Therefore, there has been a growing interest

36

in exploitation of the effective ways to reduce stress responses and improve meat

37

quality of transported broilers. Some exogenous additives, such as creatine

38

monohydrate (CMH), oregano, ascorbic acid, or chromium, supplemented in chicken

39

diets have been proposed as an effective means of mitigating transport stress

40

responses and reducing stress-induced deterioration of meat quality.6-9

41

α-methylguanidine acetic acid, popularly known as creatine (Cr), is a naturally

42

occurring nitrogen compound found primarily in skeletal muscle. The Cr is primarily

43

synthesized endogenously in the liver, kidneys and pancreas from the amino acids

44

arginine, glycine and methionine.10,11 Cr sources from both dietary and endogenous

45

biosynthesis can be transported to skeletal muscle where it combines with inorganic

46

phosphate to form phosphocreatine (PCr), which subsequently plays a pivotal role in

47

energy metabolism by donating its phosphate groups to ADP to regenerate ATP

48

catalyzed by creatine kinase, particularly when skeletal muscle are experiencing

49

intense exhaustive exercise.12-14 Thus, the muscle Cr/PCr pool serves as an important

50

cellular energy source for rapid resynthesis of ATP to meet the increased energy

51

demands of intense activities. CMH is a primary additive form of Cr. We previously

52

reported that dietary addition of CMH at 1200 mg/kg for 2 weeks before slaughter

53

alleviated stress-induced deterioration of breast meat quality by reducing rapid muscle

54

glycolysis.6 However, the detailed mechanism underlying this phenomenon remains

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

55

unclear.

56

AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is an energy-sensing enzyme and metabolic

57

transducer, which regulates both cellular and whole-body energy balance in response

58

to metabolic stresses that inhibit ATP production or accelerate ATP consumption.15

59

Several studies have reported that AMPK plays an important regulatory role in

60

postmortem muscle glycolysis.7,16 In addition, as an AMPK upstream kinase, tumor

61

suppressor liver kinase B1 (LKB1; also known as serine/threonine kinase 11, STK11)

62

plays a pivotal role in activation of AMPK in response to increases in the intracellular

63

AMP:ATP ratio.17,18 Thus, we hypothesize that the action of dietary CMH on muscle

64

energy metabolism and postmortem glycolysis is highly mediated by the AMPK

65

pathway. Therefore, the objective of this study was to further investigate the effects of

66

dietary CMH on meat quality, muscle energy status, glycolysis, activities of key

67

enzymes of glycolysis, and gene and protein expression of AMPK pathway in

68

pre-slaughter transported broilers during summer.

69

MATERIALS AND METHODS

70

Animal Care and Diets. All experimental and animal care procedures were

71

approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of Nanjing

72

Agricultural University. Arbor Acres male broilers (n=288, mean initial weight:

73

1303.17 ± 6.81 g) fed with same starter and grower diets for the first 27 days were

74

randomly distributed into 2 dietary treatments: 1) a basal control diet (192 birds), and

75

2) a basal diet supplemented with CMH at 1200 mg/kg (96 birds) from 28 to 42 d of

76

age. There were 8 replicated cages per treatment with 12 broilers per cage (1.10 m ×

77

0.70 m × 0.43 m), except the control had 24 broilers in each replicate with 2 cages.

78

CMH was purchased from Tianjin Tiancheng Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd (Tianjin, China).

79

Diets were fed in mash form. Chickens consumed feed and clean water ad libitum.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 4 of 36

Page 5 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

80

The basal diet composition and nutritional values are summarized in Table 1. All

81

chickens were weighed at 42 d of age. Feed intake was recorded and a feed

82

conversion ratio (g feed intake/g gain) was calculated.

83

Transportation and Sample Collection. At time of transport, after an 8-h

84

overnight feed withdrawal, the birds in the basal diet group were divided into 2 equal

85

groups, resulting in 3 groups of 80 birds (2 groups control, 1 group treated). All birds

86

in these 3 groups were transported from the rearing house to the laboratory according

87

to a designed protocol: 1) a 0.5-h transport of birds on basal diet (as a lower stress

88

control group), 2) a 3-h transport of birds on basal diet (T3h group), and 3) a 3-h

89

transport of birds on 1200 mg/kg CMH supplemental basal diet (CMH+T3h group).

90

Ten birds from the same replicate were placed into one crate (0.73 m × 0.54 m × 0.26

91

m), and all 24 crates were randomly distributed in the same truck. The transport

92

durations were 0600 to 0630 h for the control group, and 0600 to 0900 h for the 3-h

93

transport groups, respectively. In modern poultry industry, both chicken slaughter and

94

meat processing are forbidden in farm and have to transport to slaughterhouse, and we

95

thus chosen a 0.5-h of transport group as a lower stressful control as previously

96

reported.3 The transport distance is about 240 km with an average speed of 80 km/h.

97

During the transport period, the temperatures and humidity (RH) inside of the trucks

98

were 26.8∼31.5°C and 77.6∼83.1% in the control group, and 26.8∼34.8°C and

99

77.6∼87.3% in the 3-h transport groups, respectively. No feed or water was supplied

100

during the transport.

101

After arrival, the broilers were allowed to rest 1 hour in a shady corner without

102

feed and water supply. Immediately after rest, one bird from each crate (replicate) of

103

each treatment (n = 8) was randomly selected, stunned electrically (50 V: alternating

104

current, 400 Hz for 5 s each one) and immediately slaughtered via exsanguination.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

105

Blood samples were collected to get plasma. Muscle samples (5.0 g) of the left

106

pectoralis major (PM) were snap-frozen in liquid nitrogen, and stored at -80 ◦C until

107

analysis. The entire right PM muscle was collected and stored at 4°C for

108

determination of meat quality, and NMR relaxometry at 24 h postmortem.

109

Plasma Corticosterone Analysis. Plasma corticosterone (CORT) concentration

110

was measured using a commercial ELISA kit, validated for use in chickens (Cusabio

111

Biotech. Co., Ltd., Wuhan, China).

112

Meat Quality Measurements. Muscle pH was measured at 45 min (pH45min) and

113

24 h (pH24h) postmortem using a calibrated portable waterproof pH/ORP meter

114

(HI9125; Hanna Instruments, Cluj-Napoca, Romania). Meat color at 24 h postmortem

115

was measured using a Minolta chromameter (CR-400; Konica Minolta Sensing Inc.,

116

Osaka, Japan) with a CIE D65 illuminant, 8 mm aperture diameter and 0° viewing

117

angle. The values of lightness (L*), redness (a*), and yellowness (b*) were collected

118

from three different locations on the freshly cut surface of each sample. Drip loss,

119

cooking loss and shear force value at 24 h postmortem were determined as previously

120

described.3,6

121

NMR Transverse Relaxation (T2) Measurements. The low-field NMR spin-spin

122

relaxation measurements were conducted using a previously published procedure with

123

minor modifications.19,20 Briefly, 2.0 g sample was cut along the direction of the

124

myofiber from the PM sample, placed in a cylindrical glass tube (14 mm in diameter

125

and 5 cm high) and then inserted in the NMR probe of a PQ001 Niumag Pulsed NMR

126

analyzer (Niumag Electric Corporation, Shanghai, China). The analyzer was operated

127

at resonance frequency of 22.6 MHz at 32◦C. Transverse relaxation (T2) was

128

measured using the Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill sequence with a τ-value of 150 µs.

129

Data from 4096 echoes were acquired as 32 scan repetitions for a 1-s with a

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 6 of 36

Page 7 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

130

multiexponential model using the program MultiExp Inv Analysis (Niumag Electric

131

Corporation, Shanghai, China). Three relaxation times (T2b, T21 and T22) and their

132

corresponding water proportions (P2b, P21 and P22) were recorded.

133

Measurement of Muscle Lactic Acid, Glycogen and Glycolytic Potential.

134

Frozen muscle sample (0.50 g) was homogenized in 4.5-mL ice-cold saline, and the

135

supernatant fraction was used for measurement of lactic acid concentration using a

136

commercial kit (Nanjing Jiancheng Biochemical Institute, Nanjing, China). Glycogen

137

concentration was measured as previously described.3 The glycolytic potential (GP)

138

was calculated according to the formula: GP = 2 × (glycogen) + (lactic acid), and

139

expressed as µmol of lactic acid equivalent per g of fresh muscle.21

140

Activity Analysis of Muscle Glycolytic Key Enzymes. Approximately 0.5 g of

141

frozen muscle sample was homogenized in a centrifuge tube with 4.5 mL of 0.85%

142

ice-cold saline and then centrifuged at 3500 × g for 10 min at 4°C. The enzyme

143

activities of hexokinase (HK), pyruvate kinase (PK) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH)

144

in the supernatant were determined with their relative commercially available kits

145

(Nanjing Jiancheng Bioengineering Institute, Nanjing, China). The detection principle

146

of HK activity is based on the coupling ribulose-5-phosphate formation from glucose

147

6-phosphate to the reduction of NADP+.22 The detection principle of PK and LDH

148

activities are based on the decrease rate of NADH during the conversion of

149

phosphoenol-pyruvate into pyruvate, and the conversion of pyruvate into lactate.23,24

150

Measurement of Muscle Cr and PCr. The concentrations of muscle Cr and PCr

151

were determined by HPLC method as previously described with minor

152

modifications.25 Briefly, 300 mg of frozen muscle sample was homogenized in 2.0

153

mL of ice-cold 5% perchloric acid for 1 min. After being kept for 10 min in an ice

154

bath, the homogenate was centrifuged at 10000 × g at 4°C for 10 min. The

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

155

supernatant was adjusted to a pH of 7.0 with 0.8 M K2CO3. The mixture was kept in

156

an ice bath for 10 min, and then centrifuged at 15000 × g at 4°C for another 10 min.

157

Supernatant was filtered with a 0.45 µm membrane, and 10 µL of this sample solution

158

was injected into the Alliance HPLC system (Model 2695, Waters Corporation,

159

Milford, MA, USA) with ultraviolet detection at 210 nm. The chromatography was

160

performed on a Waters SunFire C18 column (250 mm × 4.6 mm, 5 µm) at 25°C. The

161

mobile phase was a mixture of methyl cyanides and 29.4 mM KH2PO4 buffer (2:98,

162

volume ratio) and the flow rate was 1 mL/min. The creatine and phosphocreatine

163

disodium salt (Sigma-Aldrich Inc., St. Louis, MO, USA) were used as standards.

164

Measurement of Muscle Adenosine Nucleotides. The concentrations of muscle

165

ATP, ADP and AMP were analyzed by HPLC method as previously described with

166

minor modifications.26 Briefly, 300 mg of frozen muscle sample was homogenized in

167

1.5 mL of ice-cold 7% perchloric acid for 1 min. After being kept for 15 min in an ice

168

bath, the homogenate was centrifuged at 15000 × g at 4°C for 10 min. The

169

supernatant was adjusted to a pH of 6.5 with 1.03 M KOH. The mixture was kept in

170

an ice bath for 10 min, and then centrifuged at 15000 × g at 4°C for another 10 min.

171

Supernatant was filtered with a 0.45 µm membrane, and 10 µL of this sample solution

172

was injected into the Alliance HPLC system (Model 2695, Waters Corporation,

173

Milford, MA, USA) with ultraviolet detection at 245 nm. The chromatography was

174

performed on a Waters SunFire C18 column (250 mm × 4.6 mm, 5 µm) at 30°C. The

175

mobile phase was a mixture of methanol and phosphate buffer (13.5:86.5, volume

176

ratio) and the flow rate was 1 mL/min. The standard samples of 5’-Adenosine

177

triphosphate disodium salt, 5’-ADP sodium salt, and 5’-AMP sodium salt were

178

purchased from Sigma-Aldrich Inc (St. Louis, MO, USA).

179

RNA Extraction and Real-time Quantitative PCR Analysis. Total RNA was

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 8 of 36

Page 9 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

180

extracted from frozen samples using RNAiso Plus reagent (TaKaRa Biotechnology

181

Co. Ltd., Dalian, China). Reverse transcription and real time quantitative PCR were

182

respectively conducted using the PrimeScriptTM RT Master Mix (TaKaRa

183

Biotechnology Co. Ltd., Dalian, China) and SYBR Premix Ex Taq (TaKaRa

184

Biotechnology Co. Ltd., Dalian, China) according to the manufacturer’s instruction.

185

All of the specific primers used are listed in Table 2. Real-time quantitative PCR was

186

performed using ABI 7500 Real-Time PCR System (Applied Biosystems,Foster City,

187

CA) as follows: one cycle at 95°C for 30 s; 40 cycles at 95°C for 5 s, and 60°C for 30

188

s. All of the samples were run in triplicate. The 2-△△Ct method was used for the

189

quantification with β-actin as a reference gene, and the relative abundance was

190

normalized to the control (as 1).27

191

Western Blot Analysis. The specific primary antibodies of anti-p-LKB1Thr189,

192

anti-p-AMPKαThr172 and anti-α-Tubulin were purchased from Cell Signaling

193

Technology (Beverly, MA, USA) and were validated previously for use with chicken

194

samples.28,29 A frozen muscle sample (40 mg) was homogenized in 0.5-mL ice-cold

195

RIPA lysis and extraction buffer (20 mM Tris–HCl, pH 7.4, 1 mM PMSF, 0.8 µM

196

Aprotinin, 20µM leupeptin, 0.015 µM pepstatin A, 5 mM NaF, 5 mM EDTA, 1 mM

197

sodium pyrophosphate,1 mM β-glycerophosphate, 1 mM sodium orthovanadate).

198

After centrifugation, the supernatant was collected and protein concentration was

199

determined by using a BCA protein assay kit (Beyotime Biotechnology, Haimen,

200

China). Then the proteins were boiled at 100 °C for 5 min with 6 × SDS sample buffer.

201

Equal amounts of proteins (30 µg) from each sample were then separated on 10%

202

SDS-PAGE gels and then transferred to polyvinylidene difluoride membranes

203

(Millipore, Billerica, MA, USA). To avoid non-specific binding, membranes were

204

blocked with Tris-buffered saline (TBS) that contained 0.1% (w/w) Tween 20 (TBST)

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

205

and 5% (w/v) bovine serum albumin (BSA) at room temperature for 1 h. After a brief

206

wash in TBST, the membrane was incubated with the specific primary antibodies,

207

including a rabbit polyclonal anti-p-LKB1Thr189 antibody (1:1000), a rabbit polyclonal

208

anti-p-AMPKαThr172 antibody (1:1000) and a rabbit monoclonal anti-α-Tubulin

209

antibody (1:2000) at 4 °C overnight. After washing three times in TBST, membranes

210

were incubated for 1 h with secondary anti-rabbit HRP-conjugated antibodies (1:1000)

211

in TBST containing 5% BSA. The blots were detected with the Tanon-3900

212

Chemiluminescent Imaging System (Tanon Science & Technology Co.,Ltd. Shanghai,

213

China) after reactions with ECL Plus detection reagents (Tanon Science &

214

Technology Co., Ltd. Shanghai, China). The band density was quantified with the use

215

of Quantity One software (Bio-Rad Laboratories Inc., Hercules, CA, USA). All results

216

were normalized to α-Tubulin and expressed as the relative values to those for the

217

control group.

218

Statistical Analysis. Data were analyzed with the use of SAS version 9.1 (SAS

219

Institute Inc. Cary, NC, USA; 2004). The growth performance data were analysed

220

with the cage as the experimental unit, and other data were were analysed with the

221

individual chicken from each replicate as the experimental unit (n = 8). One-factor

222

ANOVA followed by Tukey’s post hoc test were used to assess differences between

223

transport groups for the different measured variables, except the data on growth

224

performance between basal and CMH supplementation diet groups was subjected to

225

Student's t-test. Results are expressed as means ± standard error of the mean (SEM).

226

Differences were considered significant at P < 0.05.

227

RESULTS

228

Growth Performance. Compared with the basal control diet group, dietary

229

addition of CMH at 1200 mg/kg in finishing diets did not affect the average BW gain,

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 10 of 36

Page 11 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

230

average feed intake and FCR of broilers from 28 to 42 days of age (Table 3).

231

Live Weight Loss and Plasma CORT Concentration. The bird live weight loss

232

and plasma CORT concentrations were higher in the T3h group than those in the

233

control group (P < 0.05; Figure 1A, B). The CMH+T3h group had a lowered

234

concentration of plasma CORT compared with the T3h group (P < 0.05; Figure 1B).

235

There was no significant difference in live weight loss between the T3h and CMH+T3h

236

groups (Figure 1A).

237

Meat Quality. The pectoralis major muscle of T3h group had a lower pH24h, higher

238

lightness, drip loss and cooking loss than were seen in the control group (P < 0.05;

239

Table 4). CMH+T3h treatment increased muscle pH24h and reduced drip loss in

240

comparison to the T3h group (P < 0.05). No significant differences among all 3

241

treatment groups were observed in redness, yellowness and shear force values of

242

pectoralis major muscle.

243

NMR Relaxometry. The distributed water proton NMR relaxation times (T2) curve

244

is presented in Figure 2. Three peaks (T2b, T21 and T22) were detected, which

245

respectively represent 3 types of water components in meat: T2b proportions located in

246

the region of 1-2 ms is considered to be bound water tightly associated with

247

macromolecules such as proteins, T21 proportions located in the region of 40-150 ms

248

represented immobile water, and T22 proportions located in the region of 200-400 ms

249

is known as free water.19

250

Table 5 shows the data of NMR spin-spin relaxation times (T2) and proportions (P2)

251

in pectoralis major muscle at 24 h postmortem. The pectoralis major muscle of T3h

252

group had a lower P21 proportion (P < 0.01) and a higher P22 proportion (P < 0.05)

253

than those were seen in the control group. In comparison to the T3h group, CMH+T3h

254

treatment increased muscle P21 proportion although not reaching the level of the

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

255

control group (P < 0.05). There were no significant treatment effects on T2b, T21 and

256

T22 times, nor on P2b proportion of pectoralis major muscle.

257

Concentrations of Muscle Lactic Acid, Glycogen, GP, and Activities of

258

Glycolytic Enzymes. Compared with the control group, T3h treatment decreased the

259

concentration of glycogen (P < 0.05; Figure 3A), increased the concentrations of

260

lactic acid (P < 0.05; Figure 3B) and GP (P < 0.05; Figure 3C) in pectoralis major

261

muscle, which were accompanied by the increased activities of HK (P < 0.001; Figure

262

3D), PK (P < 0.01; Figure 3E) and LDH (P < 0.05; Figure 3F), respectively. Whereas

263

CMH+T3h treatment decreased the concentrations of lactic acid and GP in pectoralis

264

major muscle compared with the T3h group (P < 0.05; Figure 3B, C). There were no

265

significant differences in activities of HK, PK and LDH between the T3h and

266

CMH+T3h groups (Figure 3D, E, F).

267

Concentrations of Muscle ATP, ADP, AMP, Cr and PCr. Compared with the

268

control group, T3h treatment decreased muscle concentrations of ATP (P < 0.05;

269

Figure 4A), EC value (P < 0.05; Figure 4E) and Cr (P < 0.001; Figure 4F), and

270

increased concentration of AMP (P < 0.05; Figure 4C) and AMP/ATP ratio (P < 0.05;

271

Figure 4D), respectively. CMH+T3h treatment increased muscle concentrations of Cr

272

(P < 0.001; Figure 4F) and PCr (P < 0.001; Figure 4G) compared to both control and

273

T3h groups, and decreased muscle ADP concentration (P < 0.05; Figure 4B) compared

274

only to the T3h group. No significant differences in concentrations of muscle ATP and

275

AMP, AMP/ATP ratio, EC and PCr/Cr ratio were observed between the T3h and

276

CMH+T3h groups (Figure 4).

277

Relative Expression of Gene mRNA and Protein in AMPK Pathway. Compared

278

with the control group, T3h treatment upregulated muscle relative mRNA expression

279

of LKB1 (P < 0.001; Figure 5A) and AMPKα2 (P < 0.001; Figure 5C), and protein

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 12 of 36

Page 13 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

280

expression of p-LKB1Thr189 (P < 0.05; Figure 5D) and p-AMPKαThr172 (P < 0.01;

281

Figure 5E). CMH+T3h treatment downregulated the relative mRNA expression of

282

muscle LKB1 and AMPKα2 (P < 0.001; Figure 5A, C), and protein expression of

283

p-AMPKαThr172 (including α-1 & -2) (P < 0.01; Figure 5E) in comparison to the T3h

284

group. There was no significant difference in relative mRNA expression of AMPKα1

285

in pectoralis major muscle among all 3 treatment groups (Figure 5B).

286

DISCUSSION

287

In the present study, dietary supplementation with CMH at 1200 mg/kg for 2 weeks

288

prior to slaughter had no effect on the growth performance of broilers, which is in

289

accordance with previous findings that dietary addition of CMH at different levels for

290

14 days (600 or 1200 mg/kg) or 21 days (250, 500 or 1000 mg/kg) before slaughter

291

did not influence the growth performance of broilers.6,30 In contrast, another study

292

reported that dietary addition of creatine at 3.0% decreased average daily feed intake

293

and average BW gain from 22 to 42 days.31 The reason for this inconsistent result may

294

be ascribed to the differences in creatine supplement types, bioavailability,

295

supplementation dose and experimental duration.

296

The plasma CORT concentration has been considered as a sensitive indicator in

297

response to many types of stress.32,33 As expected, we observed significant elevated

298

plasma CORT concentration accompanied by an increase live weight loss in chicken

299

of 3-h transported group, which is consistent with findings reported previously.6,32

300

These observations indicated that broilers suffered from strong psychological or

301

physiological stress during 3-h transport duration. In addition, we also found that

302

broilers in CMH+T3h group showed a lower plasma CORT concentration compared to

303

the T3h group, indicating that dietary supplementation with CMH at 1200 mg/kg for 2

304

weeks prior to slaughter is a potential effective means of relieving stress response of

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

305

transported broilers during summer.

306

Previous studies have demonstrated that the muscle containing a higher proportion

307

of fast glycolytic fibers (type IIb fibers) are more prone to be pale, soft, and exudative

308

(PSE) pork or PSE-like chicken meat due to its anaerobic glycolysis nature, higher

309

glycogen concentration and lower ultimate pH.34,35 In chickens, the pectoralis major

310

muscle only consists of IIb type fibers, which rely primarily on glycolytic pathways

311

for energy production.3,36,37 Broilers experienced a 3- to 4-h transport showed a lower

312

ultimate pH and higher cooking loss in pectoralis major muscle at 24 h

313

postmortem.6,38 Similarly, our present results showed that 3-h transport lowered pH24h

314

and increased lightness, drip loss and cooking loss at 24 h postmortem, indicating a

315

typical PSE-like syndrome in breast muscle according to the criteria values for

316

PSE-like meat (pH24h < 5.7, L*24h > 53) as previously recommended.39 Also, our

317

results demonstrated that dietary supplementation with CMH prior to slaughter for 2

318

weeks is helpful for alleviating the deterioration of meat quality by increasing water

319

holding capacity and reducing postmortem rapid pH decline, and thereby reducing the

320

occurrence of transport-induced PSE-like breast meat.

321

Low-field proton NMR relaxation measurements is regarded as a useful approach

322

to estimate the water-holding capacity (WHC) of fresh meat since it gives a direct

323

measure of the proportion of water in the meat that is susceptible to be lost as drip.19

324

As shown in Figure 2, three relaxation proportions T2b, T21 and T22 were detected in

325

all samples, which represent three states of water in fresh meat: bound water,

326

immobilized water and free water, respectively. A higher P21 proportion

327

(approximately 95%, Table 5) suggested that the most of the water in the pectoralis

328

major muscle was the immobile water. In the present study, the 3 h transport

329

significantly reduced the WHC of breast meat by deceasing P21 proportion and

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 14 of 36

Page 15 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

330

increasing P22 proportion, which is accordance with the higher drip loss in the T3h

331

group as shown in Table 5. Nevertheless, broilers in CMH+T3h group had a significant

332

higher P21 proportion compared to the T3h group, indicating that dietary CMH may

333

have beneficial effects in the increase of muscle WHC. There is evidence that creatine

334

can increase the intracellular volume by elevating water uptake in the muscle, thereby

335

resulting in an increase of water content and WHC.40

336

In chickens, the glycogen is mainly stored in glycolytic fibers and liver. The data of

337

the present study demonstrated that transport stress accelerated the breakdown of

338

muscle glycogen and subsequent anaerobic glycolysis metabolism when oxygen is

339

limited, resulting in lactate accumulation, rapid decline of muscle pH and subsequent

340

poor meat quality as compared with the birds in the control group. The glycolysis

341

metabolic pathway is mediated by some key enzymes of anaerobic metabolism. The

342

first enzyme in glycolytic pathway is HK, which converts glucose to

343

glucose-6-phosphate; the other two key glycolytic enzymes, PK and LDH, are

344

involved

345

phosphoenol-pyruvate to pyruvate, and pyruvate to lactic acid under anaerobic

346

conditions, respectively.41,42 Our present results showed that 3-h transport increased

347

the activities HK, PK and LDH in pectoralis major muscle compared to the control

348

group, suggesting that exhaustion of muscle ATP may trigger glycolysis mechanism

349

by activating HK activity, following higher activities of PK and LDH with the

350

accumulation of the metabolites phosphoenol-pyruvate and pyruvate. In spite of this,

351

CMH supplementation significantly decreased the activity of HK, and the

352

concentration of lactic acid and GP compared to the T3h group, suggesting that the rate

353

of glycolysis reaction was reduced.

354

in

the

last

steps

of

the

glycolytic

pathway,

which

converts

ATP is the direct energy source of skeletal muscle cells. Generally, oxidative

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Page 16 of 36

355

phosphorylation generates 38 mol of ATP/1 mol of glucose, whereas anaerobic

356

glycolysis only produces 2 mol of ATP/1 mol of glucose.42 In addition, as an

357

important energy-buffering

358

phosphocreatine circuit) plays an essential role in regulating the cellular energy

359

homeostasis in periods of high-energy demand or energy supply fluctuations.12,43

360

Once intracellular ATP level is below a threshold value, as an immediate energy

361

reserve, a proportion of muscle Cr is phosphorylated to PCr, which subsequently

362

phosphorylates ADP to regenerate ATP with the catalysis of creatine kinase as follow:

363

PCr + ADP + H+ ↔ ATP + Cr.44 Thus, the muscle Cr/PCr pool serves as an important

364

cellular energy source for rapid resynthesis of ATP to meet the increased energy

365

demands of intense activities.

system,

muscle

Cr/PCr

pool (also

known

as

366

Some previous studies reported that muscle ATP concentration, ATP:ADP ratio and

367

EC were significantly decreased in broilers experiencing pre-slaughter transport or

368

heat stress.3,7,45 Similarly, our present study showed that 3-h transport decreased the

369

concentrations of muscle ATP and Cr, and EC, increased AMP concentration and

370

AMP/ATP ratio, suggesting that transport stress during summer accelerated muscle

371

ATP exhaust accompanied by the activation of Cr/PCr shuttle system. The lower ATP

372

and higher AMP/ATP ratio in muscle of 3-h transported broilers also indicated that

373

mitochondrial oxidative respiration and endogenous phosphocreatine circuit were not

374

able to generate enough ATP to meet muscle contraction demand, and then anaerobic

375

glycolysis becomes a critical pathway for ATP supply during intense muscle

376

contraction. Dietary supplementation with CMH could increase the concentrations of

377

muscle Cr or/and PCr in broilers or finishing pigs.46,47 In accordance with these

378

previous findings, we found that CMH supplementation increased concentrations of

379

muscle Cr and PCr by 20.31% and 27.45%, respectively, compared with that of birds

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 17 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

380

in the T3h group. This suggested that dietary CMH supplementation increased

381

intramuscular anaerobic (Cr and PCr) energy-buffering capacity when muscle ATP is

382

depleted in broilers subjected to transport during hot summer.

383

AMPK is activated classically within the cell in response to decreased ATP levels

384

and increased intracellular AMP:ATP ratio.48 In eukaryotic cells, heterotrimeric

385

protein AMPK is formed by α catalytic subunit and two regulatory subunits, β and γ.49

386

The catalytic α subunit of AMPK has two isoforms, α1 and α2, which display

387

differential expression patterns.28 AMPK in chicken tissues is activated in response to

388

environmental or nutritional stress factors, which deplete intracellular ATP levels.7,29

389

Similar to mammals, the AMPK activity in chicken tissues is also activated mainly via

390

LKB1.28,29 In chicken, both the mRNA and protein levels of LKB1 and AMPKα in the

391

pectoralis major muscle (fast glycolytic fibers) were decreased in response to fasting

392

stress.29 In addition, higher AMPK activity and its phosphorylated protein were

393

previous found in transport-induced PSE-like chicken meat and PSE pork.7,16 In our

394

present study, compared with birds in the control group, 3-h transport upregulated

395

muscle relative mRNA expression of LKB1 and AMPKα2, and protein expression of

396

pLKB1Thr189 and pAMPKαThr172 (including α-1 & -2), which was accompanied by the

397

decrease of ATP concentration, the increase of AMP/ATP ratio and the rapid

398

postmortem glycolysis in pectoralis major muscle. These results further confirmed

399

that AMPK pathway is an important molecular target for the control of muscle

400

glycolysis and incidence of transport-induced chicken PSE-like meat during hot

401

summer. However, we did not find significant change in the mRNA expression of

402

AMPKα1 among 3 treatment groups. A probable reason for this unexpected result is

403

that AMPKα1 isoform is predominantly expressed in the adipose tissue but the

404

AMPKα2 isoform is highly expressed in skeletal muscle.28 Nevertheless, dietary

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Page 18 of 36

405

CMH downregulated the mRNA expression of muscle LKB1 and AMPKα2, and

406

protein expression of p-AMPKαThr172, suggesting that dietary addition of exogenous

407

Cr (as CMH form) inhibits the transport stress-induced activation of AMPK pathway.

408

In conclusion, dietary addition of CMH at 1200 mg/kg improved muscle energy

409

status by enhancing energy-buffering capacity of intramuscular PCr/Cr system,

410

inhibited the transport-induced activation of AMPKα pathway, which was beneficial

411

for improving meat quality by reducing rapid muscle glycolysis of transport-stressed

412

broilers during summer.

413

AUTHOR INFORMATION

414

Corresponding Author

415

*Tel: +86-25-84399007. Fax: +86-25-84395314. E-mail: [email protected].

416

ORCID*

417

Lin Zhang:

418

Funding

419

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China

420

(31402094), the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities of China

421

(KYZ201641), the Science and Technology Innovation Fund for the Youth of Nanjing

422

Agricultural University (KJ2013017), the National Key Research and Development

423

Program of China (2016YFD0500501), and the Three Agricultural Projects of Jiangsu

424

Province (SXGC2017281).

425

Notes

426

The authors declare no competing financial interest.

427

ABBREVIATIONS USED

428

ADP,

429

AMP-activated protein kinase; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; BW, body weight; CMH,

0000-0003-1555-1086.

adenosine

diphosphate;

AMP,

adenosine

monophosphate;

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

AMPK,

Page 19 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

430

creatine monohydrate; CORT, corticosterone; Cr, creatine; EC, energy charge; FCR,

431

feed conversion ratio; GP, glycolytic potential; HK, hexokinase; LDH, lactate

432

dehydrogenase; LKB1, liver kinase B1; NMR, nuclear magnetic resonance; PCr,

433

phosphocreatine; PK, pyruvate kinase.

434

REFERENCES

435

(1) Mitchell, M.; Kettlewell, P. J. Physiological stress and welfare of broiler chickens in transit:

436

Solutions not problems. Poult. Sci. 1998, 77, 1803–1814.

437

(2) Savenije, B.; Lambooij, E.; Gerritzen, M. A.; Venema, K.; Korf, J. Effects of feed deprivation

438

and transport on preslaughter blood metabolites, early postmortem muscle metabolites, and meat

439

quality. Poult. Sci. 2002, 81, 699–708.

440

(3) Zhang, L.; Yue, H. Y.; Zhang, H. J.; Xu, L.; Wu, S. G.; Yan, H. J.; Gong, Y. S.; Qi, G. H.

441

Transport stress in broilers: I. Blood metabolism, glycolytic potential, and meat quality. Poult. Sci.

442

2009, 88, 2033–2041.

443

(4) Nijdam, E,; Arens, P.; Lambooij, E.; Decuypere, E.; Stegeman, J. A. Factors influencing

444

bruises and mortality of broilers during catching, transport, and lairage. Poult. Sci. 2004, 83,

445

1610–1615.

446

(5) Chauvin, C.; Hillion, S.; Balaine, L.; Michel, V.; Peraste, J.; Petetin, I.; Lupo, C.; Le Bouquin,

447

S. Factors associated with mortality of broilers during transport to slaughterhouse. Animal 2011, 5,

448

287–293.

449

(6) Zhang, L.; Li, J. L.; Gao, T.; Lin, M.; Wang, X. F.; Zhu, X. D.; Gao, F.; Zhou, G. H. Effects of

450

dietary supplementation with creatine monohydrate during the finishing period on growth

451

performance, carcass traits, meat quality and muscle glycolytic potential of broilers subjected to

452

transport stress. Animal 2014, 8, 1955–1962.

453

(7) Xing, T.; Xu, X.; Jiang, N.; Deng, S. Effect of transportation and pre-slaughter water shower

454

spray with resting on AMP-activated protein kinase, glycolysis and meat quality of broilers during

455

summer. Anim. Sci. J. 2015, 87, 299–307.

456

(8) Young, J. F.; Stagsted, J.; Jensen, S. K.; Karlsson, A. H.; Henckel, P. Ascorbic acid,

457

alpha-tocopherol, and oregano supplements reduce stress-induced deterioration of chicken meat

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

458

quality. Poult. Sci. 2003, 82, 1343–1351.

459

(9) Perai, A.H.; Kermanshahi, H.; Moghaddam, H. N.; Zarban, A. Effects of chromium and

460

chromium + vitamin C combination on metabolic, oxidative, and fear responses of broilers

461

transported under summer conditions. Int. J. Biometeorol. 2015, 59, 453–462.

462

(10) Walker, J. B. Creatine: biosynthesis, regulation, and function. Adv. Enzymol. Relat. Areas.

463

Mol. Biol. 1979, 50, 177–242.

464

(11) Brosnan, M. E.; Edison, E. E.; da Silva, R.; Brosnan, J. T. New insights into creatine function

465

and synthesis. Adv. Enzyme Regul. 2007, 47, 252–260

466

(12) Wyss, M.; Kaddurah-Daouk, R. Creatine and creatinine metabolism. Physiol. Rev. 2000, 80,

467

1107–1213.

468

(13) Peters, B. A.; Hal, M. N.; Liu, X. H.; Parvez, F.; Siddique, A. B.; Shahriar, H.; Uddin, M. N.;

469

Islam, T.; Ilievski, V.; Graziano, J. H.; Gamble, M. V. Low-dose creatine supplementation lowers

470

plasma guanidinoacetate, but not plasma homocysteine, in a double-blind, randomized,

471

placebo-controlled trial. J. Nutr. 2015, 145, 2245–2252.

472

(14) Harris, R. C.; Soderlund, K.; Hultman, E. Elevation of creatine in resting and exercised

473

muscle of normal subjects by creatine supplementation. Clin. Sci. 1992, 83, 367–374.

474

(15) Shaw, R. J.; Kosmatka, M.; Bardeesy, N.; Hurley, R. L.; Witters, L. A.; DePinho, R. A.;

475

Cantley, L. C. The tumor suppressor LKB1 kinase directly activates AMP-activated kinase and

476

regulates apoptosis in response to energy stress. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 2004, 101, 3329-3335.

477

(16) Shen. Q.; Means, W.; Thompson, S.; Underwood, K.; Zhu, M.; McCormick, R.; Ford, S. P.;

478

Du, M. Pre-slaughter transport, AMP activated protein kinase, glycolysis, and quality of pork loin.

479

Meat Sci. 2006, 74, 388–395.

480

(17) Hardie, D. G.; Hawley, S. A.; Scott, J. W. AMP-activated protein kinase-development of the

481

energy sensor concept. J. Physiol. 2006, 574, 7–15.

482

(18) Sakamoto, K.; Zarrinpashneh, E.; Budas, G. R.; Pouleur, A. C.; Dutta, A.; Prescott, A. R.;

483

Ashworth, A.; Jovanovic, A.; Alessi, D. R.; Bertrand, L. Deficiency of LKB1 in heart prevents

484

ischemia-mediated activation of AMPKα2 but not AMPKα1. Am. J. Physiol. 2006, 290,

485

E780–E788.

486

(19) Bertram, H. C.; Purslow, P. P.; Andersen, H. J. Relationship between meat structure, water

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 20 of 36

Page 21 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

487

mobility, and distribution: A low-field nuclear magnetic resonance study. J. Agric. Food Chem.

488

2002, 50, 824–829.

489

(20) Bertram, H. C.; Karlsson, A. H.; Rasmussen, M.; Pedersen, O. D.; Dønstrup, S.; Andersen, H.

490

J. Origin of multiex ponential T2 relaxation in muscle myowater. J. Agric. Food. Chem. 2001, 49,

491

3092–3100.

492

(21) Monin, G.; Sellier, P. Pork of low technological quality with a normal rate of muscle pH fall

493

in the immediate postmortem period: the case of the Hampshire breed. Meat Sci. 1985, 13, 49–63.

494

(22) Panserat, S.; Médale, F.; Blin, C.; Brèque, J.; Vachot, C.; Plagnes-Juan, E.; Gomes, E.;

495

Krishnamoorthy, R.; Kaushik, S. Hepatic glucokinase is induced by dietary carbohydrates in

496

rainbow trout, gilhead seabream, and common carp. Am. J. Physiol. Regul. Integr. Comp. Physiol.

497

2000, 278, R1164–R1170.

498

(23) Gutmann, I.; Bernt, E. Pyruvate kinase, in Bergmeyer, H. U.; Gawehn, K. Methods of

499

Enzymatic Analysis (2th edn). Academic Press, New York, NY, 1974, pages 774–778.

500

(24) Sekine, N.; Cirulli, V.; Regazzi, R.; Brown, L. J.; Gine, E.; Tamarit-Rodriguez, J.; Girotti, M.;

501

Marie, S.; MacDonald, M. J.; Wollheim, C. B. Low lactate dehydrogenase and high mitochondrial

502

glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase in pancreatic beta-cells. Potential role in nutrient sensing. J.

503

Biol. Chem. 1994, 269, 4895–4902.

504

(25) Mora, L.; Sentandreu, M. A.; Toldrá, F. Hydrophilic chromatographic determination of

505

carnosine, anserine, balenine, creatine, and creatinine. J. Agric. Food Chem. 2007, 55, 4664-4669.

506

(26) Liu, H.; Jiang, Y.; Luo, Y.; Jiang, W. A simple and rapid determination of ATP, ADP and AMP

507

concentrations in pericarp tissue of litchi fruit by highperformance liquid chromatography. Food

508

Technol. Biotechnol. 2006, 44, 531–534.

509

(27) Livak, K. J.; Schmittgen, T. D. Analysis of relative gene expression data using real-time

510

quantitative PCR and the 2−∆∆CT method. Methods 2001, 25, 402–408.

511

(28) Proszkowiec-Weglarz, M.; Richards, M. P. Expression and activity of the 5’-adenosine

512

monophosphate-activated protein kinase pathway in selected tissues during chicken embryonic

513

development. Poult. Sci. 2009, 88, 159–178.

514

(29) Hu, X.; Liu, L.; Song, Z.; Sheikhahmadi, A.; Wang, Y.; Buyse, J. Effects of feed deprivation

515

on the AMPK signaling pathway in skeletal muscle of broiler chickens. Comp. Biochem. Physiol.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

516

B Biochem. Mol. Biol. 2016, 191, 146–154.

517

(30) Xia, W.G.; Abdullahi, A. Y.; Zuo, J. J.; Chen, L.; Feng, D. Y. Effects of creatine monohydrate

518

on growth performance, carcass characteristics and meat quality of yellow-feathered broilers. J.

519

Anim. Vet. Adv. 2012, 11, 4382–4388.

520

(31) Chen, J.; Wang, M.; Kong, Y.; Ma, H.; Zou, S. Comparison of the novel compounds creatine

521

and pyruvate on lipid and protein metabolism in broiler chickens. Animal 2011, 5, 1082–1089.

522

(32) Kannan, G.; Heath, J.; Wabeck, C.; Souza, M.; Howe, J.; Mench, J. Effects of crating and

523

transport on stress and meat quality characteristics in broilers. Poult. Sci. 1997, 76, 523–529.

524

(33) Soleimani, A.; Zulkifli, I.; Omar, A.; Raha, A. Physiological responses of 3 chicken breeds to

525

acute heat stress. Poult. Sci. 2011, 90, 1435–1440.

526

(34) Solomon, M. B.; Van Laack, R. L. J. M.; Eastridge, J. S. Biophysical basis of pale, soft,

527

exudative (PSE) pork and poultry muscle: A review. J. Muscle Foods 1998, 9, 1–12.

528

(35) Ryu, Y. C.; Kim, B. C. The relationship between muscle fiber characteristics, postmortem

529

metabolic rate, and meat quality of pig longissimus dorsi muscle. Meat Sci. 2005, 71:351–357.

530

(36) Cong, J.; Zhang, L.; Li, J.; Wang, S.; Gao, F.; Zhou, G. Effects of dietary supplementation

531

with carnosine on growth performance, meat quality, antioxidant capacity and muscle fiber

532

characteristics in broiler chickens. J. Sci. Food. Agr. 2017, 97: 3733–3741.

533

(37) Greenberg, C. C.; Jurczak, M. J.; Danos, A. M.; Brady, M. J. Glycogen branches out: new

534

perspectives on the role of glycogen metabolism in the integration of metabolic pathways. Am. J.

535

Physiol. Endocrinol. Metab. 2006, 291, E1–E8.

536

(38) Dadgar, S.; Lee, E. S.; Leer, T. L.; Burlinguette, N.; Classen, H. L.; Crowe, T. G.; Shand, P. J.

537

Effect of microclimate temperature during transportation of broiler chickens on quality of the

538

pectoralis major muscle. Poult. Sci. 2010, 89, 1033–1041.

539

(39) Zhang, L.; Barbut, S. Effects of regular and modified starches on cooked pale, soft, and

540

exudative; normal; and dry, firm, and dark breast meat batters. Poult. Sci. 2005, 84, 789–796.

541

(40) Nissen, P. M.; Young, J. F. Creatine monohydrate and glucose supplementation to slow- and

542

fast-growing chickens changes the postmortem pH in pectoralis major. Poult. Sci. 2006, 85,

543

1038–1044.

544

(41) Scheffler, T. L.; Gerrard, D. E. Mechanisms controlling pork quality development: The

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 22 of 36

Page 23 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

545

biochemistry controlling postmortem energy metabolism. Meat Sci. 2007, 77, 7–16.

546

(42) Nelson, D. L.; Cox, M. M. Glycolysis, gluconeogenesis, and the pentose phosphate pathway,

547

in Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry (5th edn). W. H. Freeman and Company, New York, NY,

548

2008, pages 527–568,.

549

(43) Schulze, A.; Bachert, P.; Schlemmer, H.; Harting, I.; Polster, T.; Salomons, G. S.; Verhoeven,

550

N. M.; Jakobs, C.; Fowler, B.; Hoffmann, G. F.; Mayatepek, E. Lack of creatine in muscle and

551

brain in an adult with GAMT deficiency. Ann. Neurol. 2003, 53, 248–251.

552

(44) Wallimann, T.; Tokarska-Schlattner, M.; Schlattner, U. The creatine kinase system and

553

pleiotropic effects of creatine. Amino Acids 2011, 40, 1271–1296.

554

(45) Sams A. The effect of seasonal heat stress on rigor development and the incidence of pale,

555

exudative turkey meat. Poult. Sci. 1997, 76, 1616–1620.

556

(46) Wang, X. F.; Zhu, X. D.; Li, Y. J.; Liu, Y.; Li, J. L.; Gao, F.; Zhou, G. H.; Zhang, L. Effect of

557

dietary creatine monohydrate supplementation on muscle lipid peroxidation and antioxidant

558

capacity of transported broilers in summer. Poult. Sci. 2015, 94, 2797–2804.

559

(47) Li, J. L.; Guo, Z. Y.; Li, Y. J.; Zhang, L.; Gao, F.; Zhou, G. H. Effect of creatine monohydrate

560

supplementation on carcass traits, meat quality and postmortem energy metabolism of finishing

561

pigs. Anim. Prod. Sci. 2016, 56, 48-54.

562

(48) Fryer, L. G.; Foufelle, F.; Barnes, K.; Baldwin, S. A.; Woods, A.; Carling, D. Characterization

563

of the role of the AMP-activated protein kinase in the stimulation of glucose transport in skeletal

564

muscle cells. Biochem. J. 2002, 363, 167–174.

565

(49) Hardie, D. G.; Scott, J. W.; Pan, D. A.; Hudson, E. R. Management of cellular energy by the

566

AMP-activated protein kinase system. FEBS Lett. 2003, 546, 113–120.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Table 1. Basal Diet Formulation and Nutritional Values 1 to 21 days

22 to 42 days

corn

57.61

61.87

soybean meal

31.00

23.00

corn gluten meal

3.29

6.00

soybean oil

3.11

4.00

dicalcium phosphate

2.00

2.00

Ingredient (%)

limestone

1.20

1.40

L-Lysine HCl

0.34

0.35

DL-Methionine

0.15

0.08

salt

0.30

0.30

1.00

1.00

metabolisable energy (MJ/kg)

12.56

13.19

crude protein

21.10

19.60

a

premix

Nutrient level (calculated, %)

calcium

1.00

0.95

available phosphorus

0.46

0.39

lysine

1.20

1.05

methionine

0.50

0.42

methionine + cystine

0.85

0.76

a

Premix provided per kilogram of diet: vitamin A, 12,000 IU; vitamin D3, 2,500 IU; vitamin E, 20 mg;

menadione, 1.3 mg; thiamine, 2.2 mg; riboflavin, 8 mg; nicotinamide, 40 mg; calcium pantothenate, 10 mg; pyidoxine·HCl, 4 mg; biotin, 0.04 mg; folic acid, 1 mg; vitamin B12, 13 µg; 50% choline chloride, 400 mg; iron, 80 mg; copper, 8 mg; manganese, 110 mg; zinc, 60 mg; iodine, 1.1 mg; selenium, 0.3 mg.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 24 of 36

Page 25 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Table 2 Nucleotide Sequences of Specific Primers for Real-Time Quantitative PCR Analysisa genes

Primer sequences (5’ to 3’ direction)

Amplicon

size

GenBank accession no.

(bp) LKB1

F: TGAGAGGGATGCTTGAATACGA

138

NM_001045833.1

125

NM_001039603.1

215

NM_001039605.1

120

NM_205518.1

R: ACTTGTCCTTTGTTTCTGGGC AMPKα1

F: ATCTGTCTCGCCCTCATCCT R: CCACTTCGCTCTTCTTACACCTT

AMPKα2

F: GGGACCTGAAACCAGAGAACG R: ACAGAGGAGGGCATAGAGGATG

β-actin a

F: ATCCGGACCCTCCATTGTC

R: AGCCATGCCAATCTCGTCTT LKB1, liver kinase B1; AMPKα1, adenosine 5’-monophosphate-activated protein kinase α1; AMPKα2,

adenosine 5’-monophosphate-activated protein kinase α2.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Table 3. Effects of Dietary CMH Supplementation on the Growth Performance of Broilers from 28 to 42 Days of Agea,b diet treatments control

1200 mg/kg CMH

1300.90 ± 11.39

1306.25 ± 9.12

BW gain (g/bird)

1143.57 ± 15.95

1129.71 ± 20.58

feed intake (g/bird)

2268.13 ± 14.25

2259.02 ± 18.51

FCR (feed:gain, g:g)

1.98 ± 0.03

2.00 ± 0.04

initial BW at 28 d (g/bird) 28-42 days

a

Results are represented as the mean value ± standard error of eight replicates per treatment.

b

CMH, creatine monohydrate; BW, body weight; FCR, feed conversion ratio.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 26 of 36

Page 27 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Table 4. Effects of Dietary CMH Supplementation on Meat Quality of Pectoralis Major Muscle of Transport-stressed Broilersa,b

a

control

T3h

CMH+T3h

pH45min

6.47 ± 0.03

6.39 ± 0.03

6.44 ± 0.04

pH24h

5.82 ± 0.03a

5.67 ± 0.02c

5.74 ± 0.02b

L*

48.86 ± 1.03b

53.94 ± 1.36a

51.40 ± 0.97ab

a*

4.42 ± 0.22

3.81 ± 0.20

4.20 ± 0.16

b*

14.95 ± 0.61

15.43 ± 0.72

16.50 ± 0.79

drip loss (%)

2.04 ± 0.09b

2.85 ± 0.14a

2.35 ± 0.11b

cooking loss (%)

13.31 ± 0.29b

15.13 ± 0.45a

14.35 ± 40ab

shear force (N)

14.47 ± 0.56

16.06 ± 0.47

15.42 ± 0.65

Results are represented as the mean value ± standard error of eight sample birds per treatment

(n=8). Means in a row without a common superscript letter significantly differ (P < 0.05). bControl, broilers fed the basal diet and experienced a 0.5-h transport; T3h or CMH+T3h, broilers fed the basal diet or the basal diet supplemented with CMH at 1200 mg/kg from 28 to 42 days of age and experienced a 3-h transport. CMH, creatine monohydrate; pH45min, pH at 45 min postmortem; pH24h, pH at 24 h postmortem; L*, lightness; a*, redness; b*, yellowness.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Table 5. Effects of Dietary CMH Supplementation on Low-field NMR Spin-spin Relaxation Times (T2) and Proportions (P2) in Pectoralis Major of Transport-stressed Broilersa,b

a

control

T3h

CMH+T3h

T2b (ms)

1.16 ± 0.05

1.24 ± 0.06

1.25 ± 0.07

T21 (ms)

43.62 ± 2.14

41.99 ± 1.49

42.08 ± 1.41

T22 (ms)

209.42 ± 9.87

195.36 ± 9.05

202.95 ± 10.27

P2b (%)

3.02 ± 0.15

3.17 ± 0.17

3.10 ± 0.20

P21 (%)

95.11 ± 0.19a

94.20 ± 0.25c

94.76 ± 0.25b

P22 (%)

1.87 ± 0.13a

2.63 ± 0.15b

2.14 ± 0.15ab

Results are represented as the mean value ± standard error of eight sample birds per treatment

(n=8). Means in a row without a common superscript letter significantly differ (P < 0.05). bControl, broilers fed the basal diet and experienced a 0.5-h transport; T3h or CMH+T3h, broilers fed the basal diet or the basal diet supplemented with CMH at 1200 mg/kg from 28 to 42 days of age and experienced a 3-h transport. CMH, creatine monohydrate.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 28 of 36

Page 29 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Figure captions Figure 1. Effects of dietary CMH supplementation on live weight loss (A) and plasma CORT (B) concentration of transported broilers. Results are represented as the mean value ± standard error of eight sample birds per treatment (n=8). Means without a common letter significantly differ (P < 0.05.) Control, broilers fed the basal diet and experienced a 0.5-h transport; T3h or CMH+T3h, broilers fed the basal diet or the basal diet supplemented with CMH at 1200 mg/kg from 28 to 42 days of age and experienced a 3-h transport. CMH, creatine monohydrate; CORT, corticosterone.

Figure 2. Distribution of low-field NMR transverse relaxation (T2) times in the pectoralis major muscles of the control and 3-h transported broilers measured at 24 h postmortem.

Figure 3. Effects of dietary CMH supplementation on concentrations of glycogen (A), lactic acid (B), glycolytic potential (C), and activities of HK (D), PK (E) and LDH (F) in pectoralis major muscle of transport-stressed broilers. Results are represented as the mean value ± standard error of eight sample birds per treatment (n=8). Means without a common letter significantly differ (P < 0.05). Control, broilers fed the basal diet and experienced a 0.5-h transport; T3h or CMH+T3h, broilers fed the basal diet or the basal diet supplemented with CMH at 1200 mg/kg from 28 to 42 days of age and experienced a 3-h transport. CMH, creatine monohydrate; GP, glycolytic potential (GP = 2 × [glycogen] + [lactic acid]); HK, hexokinase; PK, pyruvate kinase; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase.

Figure 4. Effects of dietary CMH supplementation on concentrations of ATP (A), ADP (B), AMP (C), AMP/ATP ratio (D), EC (E), and concentrations of Cr (F), PCr (G) and PCr/Cr ratio (H) in pectoralis major muscle of transport-stressed broilers. Results are represented as the mean value ± standard error of eight sample birds per treatment (n=8). Means without a common letter significantly differ (P < 0.05). Control, broilers fed the basal diet and experienced a 0.5-h transport; T3h or CMH+T3h, broilers fed the basal diet or the basal diet supplemented with CMH at 1200 mg/kg from 28 to 42 days of age and experienced a 3-h transport. CMH, creatine monohydrate; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; ADP, adenosine diphosphate; AMP, adenosine monophosphate; EC, energy charge (EC = ([ATP] + 0.5[ADP])/([ATP] + [ADP] + [AMP]); Cr, creatine; PCr, phosphocreatine.

Figure 5. Effects of dietary CMH supplementation on relative mRNA expression for LKB1 (A), AMPKα1 (B), AMPKα2 (C), and protein abundances for p-LKB1 (D) and p-AMPK (E) in pectoralis major muscle of transport-stressed broilers. Results are represented as the mean value ± standard error of eight sample birds per treatment for mRNA expression analysis (n=8), and four sample birds per treatment for protein abundance analysis (n=4). Means without a common letter significantly differ (P < 0.05). Control, broilers fed the basal diet and experienced a 0.5-h transport;

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

T3h or CMH+T3h, broilers fed the basal diet or the basal diet supplemented with CMH at 1200 mg/kg from 28 to 42 days of age and experienced a 3-h transport. CMH, creatine monohydrate; LKB1, liver kinase B1; AMPKα1, adenosine 5’-monophosphate-activated protein kinase α1; AMPKα2, adenosine 5’-monophosphate-activated protein kinase α2; p-LKB1, phospho-liver kinase B1; p-AMPKα, phospho-adenosine 5’-monophosphate-activated protein kinase α (including α-1 & -2).

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 30 of 36

Page 31 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Figure 1

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Figure 2

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 32 of 36

Page 33 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Figure 3

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Figure 4

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 34 of 36

Page 35 of 36

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Figure 5

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Table of contents (TOC) Graphic

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 36 of 36