In vivo and in vitro study of dark pigment development in Atlantic salmon using novel methods based on image analysis

The appearance of skin and fillet muscle of Atlantic salmon, are the most important quality parameters for consumers. Salmon skin with pearl-shiny, bluish appearance is associated with high quality and freshness while a greener appearance is associated with high sexual maturation signs, which is nor...

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Main Author: Jiménez Guerrero, Raúl
Other Authors: Mørkøre, Turid, Evensen, Øystein, Gadan, Koestan
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2569790
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivmob:oai:nmbu.brage.unit.no:11250/2569790 2023-05-15T13:48:23+02:00 In vivo and in vitro study of dark pigment development in Atlantic salmon using novel methods based on image analysis Jiménez Guerrero, Raúl Mørkøre, Turid Evensen, Øystein Gadan, Koestan 2018 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2569790 eng eng Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2569790 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internasjonal http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.no CC-BY-NC-ND 93 Atlantic salmon SHK-1 Fish quality Plasma Melanogenesis Melanin Krill Master thesis 2018 ftunivmob 2021-09-23T20:15:15Z The appearance of skin and fillet muscle of Atlantic salmon, are the most important quality parameters for consumers. Salmon skin with pearl-shiny, bluish appearance is associated with high quality and freshness while a greener appearance is associated with high sexual maturation signs, which is normally linked to poorer fillet muscle quality. Regarding fillet muscle, consumers consider any dark discoloration with lower quality. Dark pigments are associated with deposition of melanin pigments. The melanin biosynthesis pathway has strong similarities at these two levels on salmon. Melanisation of the skin and skeletal muscle, and in vitro through SHK-1 cells, has not been studied simultaneously. The main goal was to study dark pigment development in salmon obtained from feeding trials at three different levels; skin, skeletal muscle and in vitro cell culture using SHK-1 cells. The fish were fed either a standard diet or diets added Antarctic krill meal. New objective methods based on image analysis were developed to study skin appearance and dark discoloration of fillets. Additionally, SHK-I cells were conditioned for producing dark pigments in vitro, using plasma as growth medium, obtained from post-smolts salmons fed with zero, low or high krill inclusion level. Results from the image analysis showed that salmon fed low krill meal diet had darker and bluer appearance, while high krill meal resulted in a darker and greener appearance compared with salmon fed the standard diet. The fillets had high prevalence of dark discoloration, but the hyperpigmented areas were generally small in all groups. The inclusion of krill meal had no significant effects on the dark discoloration severity, but the low krill inclusion showed discoloration towards red type. A positive correlation was found between the general b* value of salmon skin, and the b* value of the cranio-hypaxial muscle, which suggested a relationship between carotenoids levels in both structures. Additionally, as was hypothesized, a positive correlation between the dark pigmentation of skeletal muscle and skin melanin was found. No significant differences were seen at in vitro level in the relative expression of the tyrosinase relate family enzymes under different plasma conditioning from salmon fed graded krill meal levels. M-AA Master Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Krill Atlantic salmon Open archive Norwegian University of Life Sciences: Brage NMBU Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection Open archive Norwegian University of Life Sciences: Brage NMBU
op_collection_id ftunivmob
language English
topic Atlantic salmon
SHK-1
Fish quality
Plasma
Melanogenesis
Melanin
Krill
spellingShingle Atlantic salmon
SHK-1
Fish quality
Plasma
Melanogenesis
Melanin
Krill
Jiménez Guerrero, Raúl
In vivo and in vitro study of dark pigment development in Atlantic salmon using novel methods based on image analysis
topic_facet Atlantic salmon
SHK-1
Fish quality
Plasma
Melanogenesis
Melanin
Krill
description The appearance of skin and fillet muscle of Atlantic salmon, are the most important quality parameters for consumers. Salmon skin with pearl-shiny, bluish appearance is associated with high quality and freshness while a greener appearance is associated with high sexual maturation signs, which is normally linked to poorer fillet muscle quality. Regarding fillet muscle, consumers consider any dark discoloration with lower quality. Dark pigments are associated with deposition of melanin pigments. The melanin biosynthesis pathway has strong similarities at these two levels on salmon. Melanisation of the skin and skeletal muscle, and in vitro through SHK-1 cells, has not been studied simultaneously. The main goal was to study dark pigment development in salmon obtained from feeding trials at three different levels; skin, skeletal muscle and in vitro cell culture using SHK-1 cells. The fish were fed either a standard diet or diets added Antarctic krill meal. New objective methods based on image analysis were developed to study skin appearance and dark discoloration of fillets. Additionally, SHK-I cells were conditioned for producing dark pigments in vitro, using plasma as growth medium, obtained from post-smolts salmons fed with zero, low or high krill inclusion level. Results from the image analysis showed that salmon fed low krill meal diet had darker and bluer appearance, while high krill meal resulted in a darker and greener appearance compared with salmon fed the standard diet. The fillets had high prevalence of dark discoloration, but the hyperpigmented areas were generally small in all groups. The inclusion of krill meal had no significant effects on the dark discoloration severity, but the low krill inclusion showed discoloration towards red type. A positive correlation was found between the general b* value of salmon skin, and the b* value of the cranio-hypaxial muscle, which suggested a relationship between carotenoids levels in both structures. Additionally, as was hypothesized, a positive correlation between the dark pigmentation of skeletal muscle and skin melanin was found. No significant differences were seen at in vitro level in the relative expression of the tyrosinase relate family enzymes under different plasma conditioning from salmon fed graded krill meal levels. M-AA
author2 Mørkøre, Turid
Evensen, Øystein
Gadan, Koestan
format Master Thesis
author Jiménez Guerrero, Raúl
author_facet Jiménez Guerrero, Raúl
author_sort Jiménez Guerrero, Raúl
title In vivo and in vitro study of dark pigment development in Atlantic salmon using novel methods based on image analysis
title_short In vivo and in vitro study of dark pigment development in Atlantic salmon using novel methods based on image analysis
title_full In vivo and in vitro study of dark pigment development in Atlantic salmon using novel methods based on image analysis
title_fullStr In vivo and in vitro study of dark pigment development in Atlantic salmon using novel methods based on image analysis
title_full_unstemmed In vivo and in vitro study of dark pigment development in Atlantic salmon using novel methods based on image analysis
title_sort in vivo and in vitro study of dark pigment development in atlantic salmon using novel methods based on image analysis
publisher Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2569790
geographic Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Krill
Atlantic salmon
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Krill
Atlantic salmon
op_source 93
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2569790
op_rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internasjonal
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.no
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-ND
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