180 research outputs found

    History-Dependent Mechanical Properties of Permeabilized Rat Soleus Muscle Fibers

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    AbstractPermeabilized rat soleus muscle fibers were subjected to repeated triangular length changes (paired ramp stretches/releases, 0.03 l0,±0.1 l0 s−1 imposed under sarcomere length control) to investigate whether the rate of stiffness recovery after movement increased with the level of Ca2+ activation. Actively contracting fibers exhibited a characteristic tension response to stretch: tension rose sharply during the initial phase of the movement before dropping slightly to a plateau, which was maintained during the remainder of the stretch. When the fibers were stretched twice, the initial phase of the response was reduced by an amount that depended on both the level of Ca2+ activation and the elapsed time since the first movement. Detailed analysis revealed three new and important findings. 1) The rates of stiffness and tension recovery and 2) the relative height of the tension plateau each increased with the level of Ca2+ activation. 3) The tension plateau developed more quickly during the second stretch at high free Ca2+ concentrations than at low. These findings are consistent with a cross-bridge mechanism but suggest that the rate of the force-generating power-stroke increases with the intracellular Ca2+ concentration and cross-bridge strain

    Hypertrophy of mature xenopus muscle fibres in culture induced by synergy of albumin and insulin

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    The aim of this study was to investigate effects of albumin and insulin separately as well as in combination on mature muscle fibres during long-term culture. Single muscle fibres were dissected from m. iliofibularis of Xenopus laevis and attached to a force transducer in a culture chamber. Fibres were cultured in a serum-free medium at slack length (mean sarcomere length 2.3 μm) for 8 to 22 days. The medium was supplemented with (final concentrations): (1) bovine insulin (6 nmol/L or 200-600 nmol/L), (2) 0.2% bovine albumin or (3) 0.2% bovine albumin in combination with insulin (120 nmol/L). In culture medium with insulin, 50% of the muscle fibres became in-excitable within 7-12 days, whereas the other 50% were stable. Caffeine contractures of in-excitable muscle fibres produced 80.4±2.4% of initial peak tetanic force, indicating impaired excitation-contraction (E-C) coupling in in-excitable fibres. In the presence of albumin, all cultured muscle fibres were stable for at least 10 days. Muscle fibres cultured in medium with insulin or albumin exclusively did not hypertrophy or change the number of sarcomeres in series. In contrast, muscle fibres cultured with both albumin and insulin showed an increase in tetanic force and fibre cross-sectional area of 19.6±2.8% and 32.5±4.9%, respectively, (means±SEM.; P=0.007) after 16.3±1.7 days, whereas the number of sarcomeres in series remained unchanged. We conclude that albumin prevents muscle fibre damage and preserves E-C coupling in culture. Furthermore, albumin is important in regulating muscle fibre adaptation by a synergistic action with growth factors like insulin. © 2008 The Author(s)

    Large-scale Models Reveal the Two-component Mechanics of Striated Muscle

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    This paper provides a comprehensive explanation of striated muscle mechanics and contraction on the basis of filament rotations. Helical proteins, particularly the coiled-coils of tropomyosin, myosin and α-actinin, shorten their H-bonds cooperatively and produce torque and filament rotations when the Coulombic net-charge repulsion of their highly charged side-chains is diminished by interaction with ions. The classical “two-component model” of active muscle differentiated a “contractile component” which stretches the “series elastic component” during force production. The contractile components are the helically shaped thin filaments of muscle that shorten the sarcomeres by clockwise drilling into the myosin cross-bridges with torque decrease (= force-deficit). Muscle stretch means drawing out the thin filament helices off the cross-bridges under passive counterclockwise rotation with torque increase (= stretch activation). Since each thin filament is anchored by four elastic α-actinin Z-filaments (provided with force-regulating sites for Ca2+ binding), the thin filament rotations change the torsional twist of the four Z-filaments as the “series elastic components”. Large scale models simulate the changes of structure and force in the Z-band by the different Z-filament twisting stages A, B, C, D, E, F and G. Stage D corresponds to the isometric state. The basic phenomena of muscle physiology, i. e. latency relaxation, Fenn-effect, the force-velocity relation, the length-tension relation, unexplained energy, shortening heat, the Huxley-Simmons phases, etc. are explained and interpreted with the help of the model experiments

    Three-dimensional reconstruction and analysis of the tubular system of vertebrate skeletal muscle

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    Skeletal muscle fibres are very large and elongated. In response to excitation there must be a rapid and uniform release of Ca+ throughout for contraction. To ensure a uniform spread of excitation throughout the fibre to all the Ca+ release sites, the muscle internalizes the plasma membrane, to form the tubular (t-) system. Hence the t-system forms a complex and dense network throughout the fibre that is responsible for excitation-contraction coupling and other signalling mechanisms. However, we currently do not have a very detailed view of this membrane network because of limitations in previously used imaging techniques to visualize it. In this study we serially imaged fluorescent dye trapped in the t-system of fibres from rat and toad muscle using the confocal microscope, and deconvolved and reconstructed these images to produce the first three-dimensional reconstructions of large volumes of the vertebrate tsystem. These images showed complex arrangements of tubules that have not been described previously and also allowed the association of the t-system with cellular organelles to be visualized. There was a high density of tubules close to the nuclear envelope because of the close and parallel alignment of the long axes of the myofibrils and the nuclei. Furthermore local fluorescence intensity variations from sub-resolution tubules were converted to tubule diameters. Mean diameters of tubules were 85.9±66.6 and 91.2±8.2 nm, from rat and toad muscle under isotonic conditions, respectively. Under osmotic stress the distribution of tubular diameters shifted significantly in toad muscle only, with change specifically occurring in the transverse but not longitudinal tubules
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