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1.
J Kucera  J M Walro 《Histochemistry》1991,96(5):381-389
The pattern of regional expression of a slow-tonic myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoform was studied in developing rat soleus intrafusal muscle fibers. Binding of the slow-tonic antibody (ATO) began at the equator of prenatal intrafusal fibers where sensory nerve endings are located, and spread into the polar regions of nuclear bag2 and bag1 fibers but not nuclear chain fibers during ontogeny. The onset of the ATO reactivity coincided with the appearance of equatorial clusters of myonuclei (nuclear bag formations) in bag1 and bag2 fibers. Moreover, the intensity of the ATO reaction was strongest in the region of equatorial myonuclei and decreased with increasing distance from the equator of bag1 and bag2 fibers at all stages of prenatal and postnatal development. The polar expansion of ATO reactivity continued throughout the postnatal development of bag1 fibers, but ceased shortly after birth in bag2 fiber coincident with innervation by motor axons. Thus, afferents that innervate the equator might induce the slow-tonic MHC isoform in bag2 and bag1 fibers by regulating the myosin gene expression by equatorial myonuclei, and efferents or twitch contractile activity might inhibit the spread of the slow-tonic MHC isoform into the poles of bag2 but not bag1 fibers. Absence of ATO binding in chain fibers suggests that chain myotubes may not be as susceptible to the effect of afferents as are myotubes that develop into bag2 and bag1 fibers. The different patterns of slow-tonic MHC expression in the three types of intrafusal fiber may therefore result from the interaction of three elements: sensory neurons, motor neurons, and intrafusal myotubes.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The expression of several isoforms of myosin heavy chain (MHC) by intrafusal and extrafusal fibers of the rat soleus muscle at different stages of development was compared by immunocytochemistry. The first intrafusal myotube to form, the bag2 fiber, expressed a slow-twitch MHC isoform identical to that expressed by the primary extrafusal myotubes. The second intrafusal myotube to form, the bag1 fiber, expressed a fast-twitch MHC similar to that initially expressed by the secondary extrafusal myotubes. At subsequent stages of development, the equatorial and juxtaequatorial regions of bag2 and bag1 intrafusal myofibers began to express a slow-tonic myosin isoform not expressed by extrafusal fibers, and ceased to express some of the MHC isoforms present initially. Myotubes which eventually matured into chain fibers expressed initially both the slow-twitch and fast-twitch MHC isoforms similar to some secondary extrafusal myotubes. In contrast, adult chain fibers expressed the fast-twitch MHC isoform only. Hence intrafusal myotubes initially expressed no unique MHCs, but rather expressed MHCs similar to those expressed by extrafusal myotubes at the same chronological stage of muscle development. These observations suggest that both intrafusal and extrafusal fibers develop from common pools of bipotential myotubes. Differences in MHC expression observed between intrafusal and extrafusal fibers of rat muscle might then result from a morphogenetic effect of afferent innervation on intrafusal myotubes.  相似文献   

3.
J Kucera  J M Walro 《Histochemistry》1989,92(4):291-299
The expression of four myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms, avian slow-tonic (ATO) or neonatal-twitch (ANT) and mammalian slow-twitch (MST) or fast-twitch (MFT) in intrafusal fibers was examined by immunocytochemistry of spindles in the tenuissimus muscle of adult cats. The predominant MHCs expressed by nuclear bag fibers were ATO and MST, whereas the MHCs prevalent in nuclear chain fibers were ANT and MFT. The expression of these isoforms of MHC was not uniform along the length of intrafusal fibers. In general, both bag and chain fibers expressed avian MHC in the intracapsular region and mammalian MHC in the extracapsular region. The nonuniform expression of MHCs observed along the length of bag and chain fibers implies that different genes are activated in myonuclei located in the intracapsular and extracapsular regions of the same muscle fiber. Regional differences in gene activation might result from a greater effect of afferents on myonuclei located near the equator of intrafusal fibers then on myonuclei outside the spindle capsule.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The expression of four myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms, avian slow-tonic (ATO) or neonatal-twitch (ANT) and mammalian slow-twitch (MST) or fast-twitch (MFT) in intrafusal fibers was examined by immunocytochemistry of spindles in the tenuissimus muscle of adult eats. The predominant MHCs expressed by nuclear bag fibers were ATO and MST, whereas the MHCs prevalent in nuclear chain fibers were ANT and MFT. The expression of these isoforms of MHC was not uniform along the length of intrafusal fibers. In general, both bag and chain fibers expressed avian MHC in the intracapsular region and mammalian MHC in the extracapsular region. The nonuniform expression of MHCs observed along the length of bag and chain fibers implies that different genes are activated in myonuclei located in the intracapsular and extracapsular regions of the same muscle fiber. Regional differences in gene activation might result from a greater effect of afferents on myonuclei located near the equator of intrafusal fibers then on myonuclei outside the spindle capsule.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Whether nerve activity and active contraction of myotubes are essential for the assembly and initial differentiation of muscle spindles was investigated by paralyzing fetal rats with tetrodotoxin (TTX) from embryonic day 16 (E16) to E21, prior to and during the period when spindles typically form. TTX-treated soleus muscles were examined by light and electron microscopy for the presence of spindles and expression of myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms by the intrafusal fibers. Treatment with TTX did not inhibit the formation of a spindle capsule or the expression of a slow-tonic MHC isoform characteristic of intrafusal fibers, but did retard development of spindles. Spindles of TTX-treated E21 muscles usually consisted of one intrafusal fiber (bag2) only rather than two fibers (bag1 and bag2) typically present in untreated (control) E21 spindles. Intrafusal fibers of TTX-treated spindles also had only one sensory region supplied by multiple afferents, and were devoid of motor innervation. These features are characteristic of spindles in normal E18–E19 muscles. Thus, nerve and/or muscle activity is not essential for the assembly of muscle spindles, formation of a spindle capsule, and transformation of undifferentiated myotubes into the intrafusal fibers containing spindle-specific myosin isoforms. However, activity may promote the maturation of intrafusal bundles, as well as the maturation of afferent and efferent nerve supplies to intrafusal fibers.  相似文献   

6.
J Kucera  J M Walro 《Histochemistry》1990,93(6):567-580
The expression of several isoforms of myosin heavy chain (MHC) by intrafusal and extrafusal fibers of the rat soleus muscle at different stages of development was compared by immunocytochemistry. The first intrafusal myotube to form, the bag2 fiber, expressed a slow-twitch MHC isoform identical to that expressed by the primary extrafusal myotubes. The second intrafusal myotube to form, the bag1 fiber, expressed a fast-twitch MHC similar to that initially expressed by the secondary extrafusal myotubes. At subsequent stages of development, the equatorial and juxtaequatorial regions of bag2 and bag1 intrafusal myofibers began to express a slow-tonic myosin isoform not expressed by extrafusal fibers, and ceased to express some of the MHC isoforms present initially. Myotubes which eventually matured into chain fibers expressed initially both the slow-twitch and fast-twitch MHC isoforms similar to some secondary extrafusal myotubes. In contrast, adult chain fibers expressed the fast-twitch MHC isoform only. Hence intrafusal myotubes initially expressed no unique MHCs, but rather expressed MHCs similar to those expressed by extrafusal myotubes at the same chronological stage of muscle development. These observations suggest that both intrafusal and extrafusal fibers develop from common pools of bipotential myotubes. Differences in MHC expression observed between intrafusal and extrafusal fibers of rat muscle might then result from a morphogenetic effect of afferent innervation on intrafusal myotubes.  相似文献   

7.
Sensory and motor fibers of peripheral nerves were irreversibly destroyed in fetal rats by administering beta bungarotoxin (BTX) on embryonic day 16 or 17, after assembly of primary myotubes, but before the formation of muscle spindles. Soleus muscles of toxin-treated fetuses and their untreated littermates were removed just prior to birth and were examined by light microscopy of serial transverse sections for the presence of spindles and immunocytochemical expression of several isoforms of myosin heavy chains (MHC). Untreated muscles exhibited numerous spindles that were innervated by branches of intramuscular nerves and contained muscle fibers expressing a slow-tonic MHC isoform characteristic of the intrafusal but not extrafusal fibers. Toxin-treated muscles were devoid of intramuscular nerve bundles and perineurial structures. Encapsulations of muscle fibers resembling spindles were absent and no myotubes expressed the slow-tonic MHC isoform associated with intrafusal fibers in beta BTX-treated muscles. Thus, the assembly of muscle spindles, formation of the spindle capsule, and transformation of undifferentiated myotubes into the intrafusal fibers that contain spindle-specific myosin isoforms all depend on the presence of innervation in prenatal rat muscles.  相似文献   

8.
Whether nerve activity and active contraction of myotubes are essential for the assembly and initial differentiation of muscle spindles was investigated by paralyzing fetal rats with tetrodotoxin (TTX) from embryonic day 16 (E16) to E21, prior to and during the period when spindles typically form. TTX-treated soleus muscles were examined by light and electron microscopy for the presence of spindles and expression of myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms by the intrafusal fibers. Treatment with TTX did not inhibit the formation of a spindle capsule or the expression of a slow-tonic MHC isoform characteristic of intrafusal fibers, but did retard development of spindles. Spindles of TTX-treated E21 muscles usually consisted of one intrafusal fiber (bag2) only rather than two fibers (bag1 and bag2) typically present in untreated (control) E21 spindles. Intrafusal fibers of TTX-treated spindles also had only one sensory region supplied by multiple afferents, and were devoid of motor innervation. These features are characteristic of spindles in normal E18-E19 muscles. Thus, nerve and/or muscle activity is not essential for the assembly of muscle spindles, formation of a spindle capsule, and transformation of undifferentiated myotubes into the intrafusal fibers containing spindle-specific myosin isoforms. However, activity may promote the maturation of intrafusal bundles, as well as the maturation of afferent and efferent nerve supplies to intrafusal fibers.  相似文献   

9.
Distribution of SERCA isoforms in human intrafusal fibers   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
The sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA) is a membrane protein that plays a crucial role in muscle relaxation by transporting cytosolic Ca2+ into the lumen of the sarco/endoplasmic reticulum. In this study, the presence of SERCA1 and SERCA2 was investigated in human intrafusal fibers by immunocytochemistry. Nuclear bag1 fibers contained both SERCA1 and SERCA2 isoforms, with predominant staining seen with SERCA2 in the A and B regions. Most nuclear bag2 fibers also contained SERCA1 and SERCA2 isoforms and their coexistence frequently occurred in the A region. SERCA1 was present whereas SERCA2 was generally absent in the nuclear chain fibers. The staining intensity seen with the SERCA1 monoclonal antibody varied in the order of chain>bag1>bag2. The expression of SERCA1 isoform was found to correlate with the presence of fast myosin heavy chain (MyHC) isoform in nuclear chain fibers, whereas for nuclear bag fibers there was no such apparent correlation between patterns of expression of SERCA and MyHC isoforms. The phenotype revealed for the human bag fibers was very sophisticated and adapted to attain a very wide range of contraction and relaxation velocities.  相似文献   

10.
The first sign of developing intrafusal fibers in chicken leg muscles appeared on embryonic day (E) 13 when sensory axons contacted undifferentiated myotubes. In sections incubated with monoclonal antibodies against myosin heavy chains (MHC) diverse immunostaining was observed within the developing intrafusal fiber bundle. Large primary intrafusal myotubes immunostained moderately to strongly for embryonic and neonatal MHC, but they were unreactive or reacted only weakly with antibodies against slow MHC. Smaller, secondary intrafusal myotubes reacted only weakly to moderately for embryonic and neonatal MHC, but 1–2 days after their formation they reacted strongly for slow and slow-tonic MHC. In contrast to mammals, slow-tonic MHC was also observed in extrafusal fibers. Intrafusal fibers derived from primary myotubes acquired fast MHC and retained at least a moderate level of embryonic MHC. On the other hand, intrafusal fibers developing from secondary myotubes lost the embryonic and neonatal isoforms prior to hatching and became slow. Based on relative amounts of embryonic, neonatal and slow MHC future fast and slow intrafusal fibers could be first identified at E14. At the polar regions of intrafusal fibers positions of nerve endings and acetylcholinesterase activity were seen to match as early as E16. Approximately equal numbers of slow and fast intrafusal fibers formed prenatally; however, in postnatal muscle spindles fast fibers were usually in the majority, suggesting that some fibers transformed from slow to fast.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Muscle spindles were studied histochemically in serial transverse sections of specimens of the cat tenuissimus muscle. The nuclear chain intrafusal muscles fibers were separated into three subtypes, called long, intermediate and typical. The long chain and intermediate chain fibers tended to assume a particular position within the axial bundle of intrafusal fibers. The fibers were usually located in that layer of chain fibers that was positioned farthest away from the bag2 fiber. Furthermore, they were usually situated adjacent to the bag1 fiber throughout much of the extent of the spindle pole. Some long chain and intermediate chain fibers had several fiber nuclei abreast at the equator rather than a single row of central nuclei, as in most nuclear chain fibers. The relative position of intrafusal fibers within the cat spindle may reflect their order of formation during development, with the fibers retaining, to a variable degree, their association with the bag2 fiber which acted as template. Thus, the axial position of long chain and intermediate chain fibers suggests that they are among the first nuclear chain fibers to form. This may play a role in the known preferential innervation of these chain fibers by skeleto-fusimotor axons.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Mammalian intrafusal fibre types (nuclear chain, nuclear bag1 and nuclear bag2 fibres) are known to differ in their ultrastructure, intensity of the myofibrillar histochemical ATP-ase reaction, type of innervation and time course of contraction. The present study concerns the myosin composition of these intrafusal fibre types in the soleus muscle (mouse) and the extensor digitorum longus muscle (rat). We used an immunohistochemical method with three myosin antisera raised in rabbits: anti chicken pectoral myosin, anti chicken heart myosin (1) and anti chicken heart myosin (2) (=anti chicken heart myosin (1) adsorbed with muscle powder from soleus muscle of guinea pig). The results showed that three intrafusal fibre types differed in their myosin composition. A comparison of intrafusal fibre types with extrafusal fibre types for the histochemical myofibrillar ATP-ase reactivity and the reactivity with myosin antisera showed a resemblance of nuclear chain fibres with extrafusal type II fibres and a difference between nuclear bag1 and nuclear bag2 fibres and all other fibre types.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Serial cross sections of rat, rabbit and cat intrafusal fibers from muscle spindles of normal adult hindlimb muscles were incubated with a monoclonal antibody against embryonic myosin heavy chains. Intrafusal fiber types were identified by noting their staining patterns in adjacent sections incubated for myofibrillar ATPase after acid or alkaline preincubation. In rat and rabbit muscle spindles dynamic nuclear bag1 fibers reacted strongly at the polar and juxtaequatorial regions. Static nuclear bag2 fibers reacted weakly or not at all at the polar region, but showed a moderate amount of activity at the juxtaequator. At the equatorial region both types of nuclear bag fibers displayed a rim of fluorescence surrounding the nuclear bags, while the areas occupied by the nuclear bags themselves were negative. Nuclear chain fibers in rat and rabbit muscle spindles were unreactive with the specific antibody over their entire length. In cat muscle spindles both types of nuclear bag fibers presented profiles which resembled those of the nuclear bag fibers in the other two species, but unlike in rat and rabbit spindles, cat nuclear chain fibers reacted as strongly as dynamic nuclear bag1 fibers.Dedicated to Professor Dr. T.H. Schiebler on the occasion of his 65th birthday  相似文献   

14.
Summary The composition of adult rat soleus muscle spindles, with respect to myosin heavy chain isoforms and M-band proteins, was studied by light-microscope immunohistochemistry. Serial sections were labelled with antibodies against slow tonic, slow twitch, fast twitch and neonatal myosin isoforms as well as against myomesin, M-protein and the MM form of creatine kinase. Intrafusal fiber types were distinguished according to the pattern of ATPase activity following acid and alkaline preincubations.Nuclear bag1 fibers were always strongly stained throughout with anti-slow tonic myosin, were positive for anti-slow twitch myosin towards and in the C-region but were unstained with anti-fast twitch and anti-neonatal myosins. The staining of nuclear bag2 fibers was in general highly variable. However, they were most often strongly stained by anti-slow tonic myosin in the A-region and gradually lost this reactivity towards the poles, whereas a positive reaction with anti-slow twitch myosins was found along the whole fiber. Regional staining variability with antineonatal and anti-fast myosins was apparent, often with decreasing intensity towards the polar regions. Nuclear chain fibers showed strong transient reactivity with anti-slow tonic myosin in the equatorial region, did not react with anti-slow twitch and were always evenly stained by anti-fast twitch and anti-neonatal myosins. All three intrafusal fiber types were stained with anti-myomesin. Nuclear bag1 fibers lacked staining for M-protein, whereas bag2 fibers displayed intermediate staining, with regional variability, often increasing in reactivity towards the polar regions. Chain fibers were always strongly stained by anti-M-protein. The MM form of creatine kinase was present in all three fiber types, but bag1 fibers were less reactive and clear striations were not observed, in contrast to bag2 and chain fibers. Out of 38 cross sectioned spindles two were found to have an atypical fiber composition, (lack of chain fibers) and a rather diverse staining pattern for the different antibodies tested.Taken together, the data show that in adult rat solcus, slow tonic and neonatal myosin heavy, chain isoforms are only expressed in the muscle spindle fibers and that each intrafusal fiber type has a unique, although variable, composition of myosin heavy chain isoforms and M-band proteins. We propose that both motor and sensory innervation might be the determining factors regulating the variable expression of myosin heavy chain isoforms and M-band proteins in intrafusal fibers of rat muscle spindles.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Muscle spindles were examined histochemically in serial transverse sections of cat tenuissimus muscles. The myofibrillar adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) staining reaction was used to identify nuclear bag1, bag2 and nuclear chain intrafusal muscle fibers. Regional differences in ATPase staining occurred along the bag1 and bag2 fibers but not along the chain fibers. All intrafusal fiber types displayed regional variability in staining for nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide tetrazolium reductase (NADH-TR). Motor nerve terminals were demonstrated along the poles of bag1, bag2 and chain fibers by staining for cholinesterase (ChE). There was no consistent spatial correlation between the intensity of regional ATPase staining along the bag fibers and location, number or type of motor endings. However, most ChE deposits occurred in intrafusal fiber regions that displayed the greatest NADH-TR variability. Some fiber poles or whole intrafusal fibers were devoid of any ChE deposits but their ATPase and NADH-TR content was comparable to that of fibers bearing ChE deposits. The observations suggested that motor nerve fibers per se may not play a major role in determining the histoenzymatic content of intrafusal fibers.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The expression of myosin heavy chain isoforms in muscle spindle fibres has been the subject of a number of immunocytochemical studies, some of them with discordant results. In order to assess whether these discrepancies are due to differences in the specificity and sensitivity of the antibodies used, we have compared the reactivity of rat muscle spindle fibres to two pairs of antibodies presumed to be directed against slow tonic (ALD 19 and ALD 58) and neonatal (NN5) and neonatal/fast (MF30) myosin heavy chains. Adult, developing and neonatally de-efferented muscle spindles from the rat hind limb muscles were studied in serial cross-sections processed for the peroxidase-antiperoxidase method. Important differences in the staining profiles of intrafusal fibres were noted when ALD 19 and ALD 58 were compared. ALD 19 stained the muscle spindle precursors from the seventeenth day in utero, whereas ALD 58 only did so by the twentieth day of gestation. In adult spindles ALD 19 stained the nuclear bag1 fibres along their entire length, whereas ALD 58 did not stain these fibres towards their ends. ALD 19 stained the nuclear bag2 fibres along the A, B and inner C region, but ALD 58 stained these fibres only in the A and the inner B regions. ALD 19 stained some nuclear chain fibres along a short equatorial segment, whereas ALD 58 did not stain the nuclear chain fibres at all. NN5 stained the nascent nuclear bag1 and chain fibre precursors at earlier stages of development than MF30. Clear differential staining between primary and secondary generation of both extra- and intrafusal myotubes was seen with NN5, wheras MF30 stained all myotubes alike. However, in postnatal spindles, MF30 was a very good negative marker of nuclear bag1 fibres. The staining profile of the adult fibres with NN5 and MF30 was rather similar. The staining pattern of neonatally de-efferented bag fibres obtained with ALD 19 and ALD 58 was practically identical and it differed from that of control spindles, confirming that motor innervation participates in the regulation of the expression of slow tonic MHC along the length of the nuclear bag2 fibres, as we have previously shown with ALD 19. The distinct staining patterns obtained with ALD 19 versus ALD 58 and with NN5 versus MF30 reflect differences in antibody sensitivity and specificity. These differences account, in part, for the discrepancies in the results of previous studies on muscle spindles, published by Kucera and Walro using ALD 58 and MF30, and by us using ALD 19 and NN5.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The development of muscle spindles, with respect to the expression of myosin heavy chain isoforms was studied in rat hind limbs from 17 days of gestation up to seven days after birth. Serial cross-sections were labelled with antibodies against slow tonic, slow twitch and neonatal isomyosins, myomesin, laminin and neurofilament protein.At 17–18 days of gestation, a small population of primary myotubes expressing slow tonic myosin were identified as the earliest spindle primordia. These myotubes also expressed slow twitch and, to a lesser extent, neonatal myosin. At 19–20 days of gestation a second myotube became apparent; this staining strongly with anti-neonatal myosin. A day later this secondary myotube acquired reactivity to anti-slow tonic and anti-slow twitch myosins. By birth, a third myotube was present; this staining strongly with anti-neonatal myosin but otherwise unreactive with the other antibodies against myosin heavy chains. Three days after birth a fourth myotube, with identical reactivity to the third one, became apparent. Regional variation in the expression of isomyosins, which was present since birth in the two nuclear bag fibers was further enhanced: the nuclear bag2 staining strongly with anti-slow tonic and antineonatal in the equatorial region and with decreasing intensity towards the poles, whilst with anti-slow twitch the stainability was low in the equatorial and high in the polar region. The nuclear bag1 fiber showed a homogeneous staining: high with anti-slow tonic, moderate with anti-neonatal, and displayed stainability to antislow twitch myosin in the polar regions only. No regional variation was found along the chain fiber/myotube. At seven days after birth, the pattern of reactivity was similar to that found in the adult spindles, except for the bag1 fiber which still expressed neonatal myosin.We show that slow tonic myosin is expressed from early development and it is a reliable marker of developing bag fibers. We suggest that muscle spindles are formed from special cell lineages of which the primary generation myotubes expressing slow tonic myosin represent the primordium of muscle spindles.  相似文献   

18.
Sections of chicken tibialis anterior and extensor digitorium longus muscles were incubated with monoclonal antibodies against myosin heavy chains (MHC). Ventricular myosin was present in developing secondary intrafusal myotubes when they were first recognized at embryonic days (E) 13–14, and in developing extrafusal fibers prior to that date. The reaction in intrafusal fibers began to fade at E17, and in 2-week-old postnatal and older muscles the isoform was no longer recognized. Only those intrafusal fibers which also reacted with a monoclonal antibody against atrial and slow myosin contained ventricular MHC. Intrafusal myotubes which developed into fast fibers did not express the isoform. Hence, based on the presence or absence of ventricular MHC, two lineages of intrafusal fiber are evident early in development. Strong immunostaining for ventricular MHC was observed in primary extrafusal myotubes at E10, but the isoform was already downregulated at E14, when secondary intrafusal myotubes were still forming and expressed ventricular MHC. Only light to moderate and transient immunostaining was observed in coexisting secondary extrafusal myotubes, most of which developed into fast fibers. Thus at the time when nascent muscle spindles are first recognized, differences in MHC profiles already exist between prospective intrafusal and extrafusal fibers. If intrafusal fibers stem from a pool of primordial muscle cells, which is common to intrafusal and extrafusal myotubes, they diverged from it some time prior to E13.This paper is dedicated to Prof. D. Pette, Konstanz, on the occasion of his 60th birthday  相似文献   

19.
Summary In the present study we have investigated the reactivity of rat muscle to a specific monoclonal antibody directed against alpha cardiac myosin heavy chain. Serial cross sections of rat hindlimb muscles from the 17th day in utero to adulthood, and after neonatal denervation and de-efferentation, were studied by light microscope immunohistochemistry. Staining with anti- myosin heavy chain was restricted to intrafusal bag fibres in all specimens studied. Nuclear bag2 fibres were moderately to strongly stained in the intracapsular portion and gradually lost their reactivity towards the ends, whereas nuclear bag1 fibres were stained for a short distance in each pole. Nuclear bag2 fibres displayed reactivity to anti- myosin heavy chain from the 21st day of gestation, whereas nuclear bag1 fibres only acquired reactivity to anti- myosin heavy chain three days after birth. After neonatal de-efferentation, the reactivity of nuclear bag2 fibres to anti- myosin heavy chain was decreased and limited to a shorter portion of the fibre, whereas nuclear bag1 fibres were unreactive. We showed that a myosin heavy chain isoform hitherto unknown for skeletal muscle is specifically expressed in rat nuclear bag fibres. These findings add further complexity to the intricate pattern of isomyosin expression in intrafusal fibres. Furthermore, we show that motor innervation influences the expression of this isomyosin along the length of the fibres.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+-pumping ATPase (Ca-ATPase) and calsequestrin (CaS) were visualized by indirect immunofluorescence at the polar regions of adult rat, rabbit and cat intrafusal fibers. The immunohistochemical reaction products were regarded as histochemical markers of the SR and as valid indicators of the distribution of the two Ca2+sequestering proteins. Static nuclear bag2 fibers displayed lower levels of both Ca-ATPase and CaS than the other two intrafusal fiber types. Nuclear chain fibers presented the highest Ca-ATPase levels and, together with dynamic nuclear bag1 fibers, they also exhibited relatively high amounts of CaS. The level of Ca-ATPase was lower in bag1 fibers than in nuclear chain fibers, but not as low as in bag2 fibers. The comparatively high levels of Ca-ATPase and CaS seen in nuclear chain fibers coincided with their reported faster contractile speeds compared to nuclear bag fibers.Dedicated to Professor Dr. T.H.Schiebler on the occasion of his 65th birthday  相似文献   

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