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acceptable (early stages of microbial infestation),

20–50 inferior quality and >50 spoiled meat.

The BAI values of fermented meat products

are naturally higher; a limit of 500 mg/kg was

proposed for salami.

Other biogenic amines are spermidine [N-(3-

aminopropyl)-1,4-butandiamine] and spermine [N,

N ′ -bis-(3-aminopropyl)-1,4-butandiamine], which

are biogenetically formed from putrescine and

belong to the constituents of meat. The main

compound is spermine, with a concentration in

the range of 25–65 mg/kg.

12.3.6 Guanidine Compounds

Creatine and creatinine (I and II, respectively; cf.

Formula 12.23) are characteristic constituents of

muscle tissue and their assay is used to detect the

presence of meat extract in a food product. Creatine

is present in fresh beef at 0.3–0.6% and creatinine

at 0.02–0.04%.

In living muscle, 50–80% of creatine is in the

phosphorylated form, creatine phosphate (III, cf.

Formula 12.23), which is in equilibrium with

ATP. The reaction rate is highly influenced by

the enzyme creatine phosphokinase. Creatine

phosphate serves as an energy reservoir (free

energy of hydrolysis, G 0 = −42.7kJ/mole;

of ATP: G 0 = −29.7kJ/mole). Creatine

phosphate has a higher phosphoryl group transfer

potential than ATP. Hence, when muscle is

stimulated for a prolonged period in the absence

of glycolysis or respiration, the supply of creatine

phosphate will become depleted within a couple

of hours by maintaining the ATP concentration.

This is especially the case in post-mortem

muscle, when the ATP supply has declined

significantly through oxidative respiration.

12.3 Muscle Tissue: Composition and Function 585

12.3.7 Quaternary Ammonium Compounds

Choline and carnitine are present in muscle tissue

at 0.02–0.06% and 0.05–0.2%, respectively (on

a fresh weight basis). Choline is synthesized from

serine with colamine as an intermediary product

(cf. Reactions 12.24) and carnitine is obtained

from lysine through ε-N-trimethyllysine and butyrobetaine

(cf. Reactions 12.25).

The carnitine fatty acid esters, which are in equilibrium

with long chain acyl-CoA molecules in

living muscle tissue, are of biochemical importance.

The carnitine fatty acid ester, but not the

acyl-CoA ester, can traverse the inner mitochondrial

membrane. After the fatty acid is oxidized

within the mitochondria, carnitine is instrumental

in transporting the generated acetic acid out of the

mitochondria.

(12.24)

(12.25)

(12.23)

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