M. Enser et al., Feeding linseed to increase the n-3 PUFA of pork: fatty acid composition of muscle, adipose tissue, liver and sausages, MEAT SCI, 55(2), 2000, pp. 201-212
Eighty pigs, male and female littermate pairs, were fed a control or a test
diet from 25 to 95 kg live weight. The diets, as fed, contained 15.5 g/kg
linoleic acid (18:2) and 1.9 g/kg alpha-linolenic acid (18:3) (control) or
10 g/kg linoleic acid and 4 g/kg alpha-linolenic acid (test). The test diet
. with added linseed, was, therefore, high in the main n-3 polyunsaturated
fatty acid (PUFA) 18:3 and low in the main n-6 PUFA 18.2. Making this relat
ively small change led to a 56% increase in the content of 18:3 in muscle a
nd major increases in the contents of the beneficial longer chain PUFAs EPA
(20:5n-3) (100% increase) and DHA (22:6n-3) (35% Increase) which are synth
esised from 18:3n-3. Levels of EPA and DHA in pigmeat adipose tissue were a
lso increased by the test diet. In liver, the test diet resulted in an 18:3
level 4x higher than in muscle, with 10x more EPA and 20x more DHA. Sausag
es, analysed after 6 months frozen storage also had high n-3 PUFA levels, d
ue to the contribution of these fatty acids from both muscle and adipose ti
ssue. From;a health perspective these results confirm the potential of pigm
eat to supply valuable n-3 PUFA to the human diet. The test diet produced a
PUFA:saturated FA ratio in muscle of 0.4, close to the minimum recommended
value for the diet as a whole and an n-6:n-3 ratio of 5, a significant imp
rovement on the current average for pigmeat (7). It is estimated that the t
est diet would provide 12 g of long chain n-3 PUFA to the human diet per an
num at current pigmeat consumption levels in the UK, about a third of that
from oily fish. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.