Abstract

Serial sections of longissimus dorsi and rectus femoris muscles from 15 Yorkshire breed pigs (live weights 24-46 and 49-139 kg) were stained for glycogen (PAS) and a mitochondrial enzyme (NAD tetrazolium reductase). Muscle fibres with a low mitochondrial content in both muscles were more frequently PAS-positive than fibres with a high or intermediate mitochondrial content. However, some pigs had all their muscle fibres PAS-positive while one pig with a high post-mortem muscle pH had all rectus femoris fibres PAS-negative. Relative to lighter weight pigs, longissimus dorsi muscles of heavy pigs tended to have less fibres with a high mitochondrial content and less fibres with a positive PAS reaction. Compared to longissimus dorsi muscles, rectus femoris muscles had more fibres with a high mitochondrial content and less with a positive PAS reaction. All fibres in both muscles became PAS-negative with an accompanying decrease in pH by 24 hr post-mortem. Fibres from longissimus dorsi muscles frequently had PAS-positive sarcoplasmic cores between their myofibrils. Heavy pigs tended to have larger cores (up to a mean maximum diameter of 13.4 mum), more fibres with cores, and more cores per fibre. The pigs involved exhibited no other ante- or post-mortem muscle abnormalities.

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