Abstract
While the detrimental effects of high temperature stress on fish growth and disease resistance have been widely reported, its impact on muscle quality has received limited attention. In this study, largemouth bass Micropterus salmoides with an initial body weight of 45.73 g were subjected to a 60-day growth trial (~25 °C), followed by a 5-day acute warming phase and a subsequent 30-day chronic high temperature exposure (32 °C). Through integrated analyses of morphological parameters, texture characteristics, TUNEL assay, gene expression analysis, and metabolomics in muscle, the effects of high temperature stress on the meat quality of largemouth bass were systematically examined. The results showed that high temperature stress significantly upregulated key genes in the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway (trim13, foxo1α) and key genes in the autophagy-lysosome pathways (lc3α, lc3β, bcl2l1, ctsl2), induced apoptosis in muscle cells, and led to significant reductions in myofiber diameter and density. In terms of textural properties, high temperature stress significantly decreased parameters such as springiness, adhesiveness, and cohesiveness, as well as water holding capacity. Metabolomic analysis further revealed that high temperature induced remodeling of energy metabolism and significant reprogramming of purine and amino acid metabolic pathways, resulting in decreased levels of key flavor compounds, including IMP, GMP, flavor amino acids (glutamic acid, alanine, methionine, arginine, proline), and peptides (glu-glu-lys and glu-cys-gly), thereby adversely affecting muscle flavor quality. The findings of this study provide a theoretical basis for understanding the impact of thermal stress on the eating quality of farmed fish.