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1.
The mechanical properties of two extraocular muscles (superior oblique and superior rectus muscles) of the frog were studied and compared with those of a frog's skeletal muscle (iliofibularis muscle) which contains the same types of muscle fibres as the oculorotatory muscles. The extraocular muscles are very fast twitching muscles. They exhibit a smaller contraction time, a smaller half-relaxation time, a higher fusion frequency, and a lower twitch-tetanus ratio than the skeletal muscles. The maximum isometric tetanic tension produced per unit cross-sectional area is lower in the extraocular muscles than in skeletal muscles. However, the extraocular muscles show a higher fatigue resistance than the skeletal muscles. With respect to the dynamic properties there are some differences between the various oculorotatory muscles of the frog. The superior rectus muscle exhibits a faster time-course of the contraction, a higher fusion frequency, and a higher fatigability than the superior oblique muscle. An increase of the extracellular K+-concentration evokes sustained contractures not only in the extraocular muscles but also in the iliofibularis muscle; between these muscles there are no striking differences in the mechanical threshold of the whole muscle preparation. The mechanical threshold depends on the Ca++-concentration of the bathing solution and it is found in a range between 12.5 and 17.5 mM K+ in a normal Ringer solution containing 1.8 mM Ca++. The static-mechanical properties of the extraocular muscles of the frog and the dependence of the active developed tension on the muscle extension are very similar to those which are known to exist in the extraocular muscles of other vertebrates. In tetanic activated frog's oculorotatory muscles a linear relationship exists between length and tension. A variation of the stimulation frequency does not change the slope of this curve but causes parallel shifts of the curve. The peculiar properties of the extraocular muscles of the frog are discussed with respect to the muscle fibre types in these muscles and to the diameter of the muscle fibres.  相似文献   

2.
Some morphological, physiological, and pharmacological properties of the retractor bulbi muscle of the frog were tested. The enzyme-histochemical investigation shows that the retractor bulbi muscle contains twitch muscle fibres only. Two types of twitch muscle fibres, which are especially different in their diameter and in the content of mitochondria, build the muscle in an irregular arrangement; tonic muscle fibres were not observed. On the average, the isolated retractor bulbi muscle has at room temperature a contraction time of 26 ms, a half-relaxation time of 28 ms, a fusion frequency of 75 stimuli/s, and a twitch-tetanus ratio of 0.28. The fatigability of this muscle is higher than in oculorotatory eye muscles but lower than in skeletal muscles of the frog. An increase of the extracellular K+-concentration elicits in retractor bulbi muscles a quickly transient contracture; the mechanical threshold of the muscle fibres is found in a range between 20 and 25 mM K+ in Ringer solution. Similar short-lasting contractures, which are probably caused by twitch fibres, rich in mitochondria, are also evoked by application of depolarizing drugs like acetylcholine. The properties of the retractor bulbi muscle are compared with those of the sartorius muscle of the frog, which likewise contains twitch muscle fibres only.  相似文献   

3.
Studies of the halothane-cooling contractures of skeletal muscle   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The characteristics of transient contractures elicited by rapid cooling of frog or mouse muscles perfused in vitro with solutions equilibrated with 0.5-2.0% halothane are reviewed. The data indicate that these halothane-cooling contractures are dose dependent and reproducible, and their amplitude is larger in muscles containing predominantly slow-twitch type fibers, such as the mouse soleus, than in muscles in which fast-twitch fibers predominate, such as the mouse extensor digitorum longus. The halothane-cooling contractures are potentiated in muscles exposed to succinylcholine. The effects of Ca2+-free solutions, of the local anesthetics procaine, procainamide, and lidocaine, and of the muscle relaxant dantrolene on the halothane-cooling contractures are consistent with the proposal that the halothane-cooling contractures result from synergistic effects of halothane and low temperature on Ca sequestration by the sarcoplasmic reticulum. Preliminary results from skinned rabbit muscle fibers support this proposal. The halothane concentrations required for the halothane-cooling contractures of isolated frog or mouse muscles are comparable with those observed in serum of patients during general anesthesia. Accordingly, fascicles dissected from muscle biopsies of patients under halothane anesthesia for programmed surgery develop large contractures when rapidly cooled. The amplitude of these halothane-cooling contractures declined with the time of perfusion of the muscle fascicles in vitro with halothane-free physiological solutions. It is suggested that the halothane-cooling contractures could be used as a simple experimental model for the investigation of the effects of halothane on Ca homeostasis and contractility in skeletal muscle and for study of drugs of potential use in the management of the contractures associated with the halothane-induced malignant hyperthermia syndrome.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
The skeletal muscles of chickens, frogs, and fish have been reported to express two isoforms (alpha and beta) of the sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium release channel (ryanodine receptor or RYR), while mammals express only one. We have studied patterns of RYR isoform expression in skeletal muscles from a variety of fish, reptiles, and birds with immunological techniques. Immunoblot analysis with a monoclonal antibody that recognizes both nonmammalian RYR isoforms and a polyclonal antibody specific to the alpha isoform show two key results: (a) two reptilian orders share with mammals the pattern of expressing only the alpha (skeletal) RYR isoform in skeletal muscle; and (b) certain functionally specialized muscles of fish and birds express only the alpha RYR isoforms. While both isoforms are expressed in the body musculature of fish and birds, the alpha isoform is expressed alone in extraocular muscles and swimbladder muscles. The appearance of the alpha RYR isoform alone in the extraocular muscles and a fast-contracting sonic muscle in fish (toadfish swimbladder muscle) provides evidence that this isoform is selectively expressed when rapid contraction is required. The functional and phylogenetic implications of expression of the alpha isoform alone are discussed in the context of the mechanism and evolution of excitation-contraction coupling.  相似文献   

5.
Using tadpoles of the lake frog Rana ridibunda Pall. during metamorphosis, a study was made of the heat resistance of the provisional muscle tissue of the tail and of that of two definitive muscles belonging to low-resistant (musculus iliofibularis) and high-resistant (musculus gastrocnemius) groups. It has been shown that during the late metamorphosis a statistically significant direct relation exists between the heat resistance of the provisional muscle tissue of the tail and definitive m. iliofibularis. A comparison with the earlier published data points to a positive correlation between each of these two characteristics and the survival of larvae at high injurious temperature.  相似文献   

6.
Biochemical investigation of Ca2+ release channel proteins has been carried out mainly with rabbit skeletal muscles, while frog skeletal muscles have been preferentially used for physiological investigation of Ca2+ release. In this review, we compared the properties of ryanodine receptors (RyR), Ca2+ release channel protein, in skeletal muscles between rabbit and frog. While the Ryr1 isoform is the main RyR of rabbit skeletal muscles, two isoforms, - and -RyR which are homologous to Ryr1 and Ryr3 isoforms in mammals, respectively, coexist as a homotetramer in a similar amount in frog skeletal muscles. The two isoforms in an isotonic medium show very similar property in [3H]ryanodine binding activity which is parallel to Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) activity, and make independent contributions to the activities of the sarcoplasmic reticulum. CICR and [3H]ryanodine binding activities of rabbit and frog are qualitatively similar in stimulation by Ca2+, adenine nucleotide and caffeine, however, they showed the following quantitative differences. First, rabbit RyR showed higher Ca2+ affinity than the frog. Second, rabbit RyR showed higher activity in the presence of Ca2+ alone with less stimulation by adenine nucleotide than the frog. Third, rabbit RyR displayed less enhancement of [3H]ryanodine binding by caffeine in spite of having a similar magnitude of Ca2+ sensitization than the frog, which may explain the occasional difficulty by researchers to demonstrate caffeine contracture with mammalian skeletal muscles. Finally, but not least, rabbit RyR still showed marked inhibition of [3H]ryanodine binding in the presence of high Ca2+ concentrations in the 1 M NaCl medium, while frog RyR showed disinhibition. Other matters relevant to Ca2+ release were also discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Although the extraocular muscles contain stretch receptors it is generally believed that their afferents exert no influence on the control of eye movement. However, we have shown previously that these afferent signals reach various brainstem centres concerned with eye movement, notably the vestibular nuclei, and that the decerebrate pigeon is a favourable preparation in which to study their effects. If the extraocular muscle afferents do influence oculomotor control from moment-to-moment they should exert a demonstrable effect on the oculomotor nuclei. We now present evidence that extraocular muscle afferent signals do, indeed, alter the responses of units in an oculomotor nucleus (the abducens, VI nerve nucleus, which supplies the lateral rectus muscle) to horizontal, vestibular stimulation induced by sinusoidal oscillation of the bird. Such stimuli evoke a vestibulo-ocular reflex in the intact bird. The extraocular stretch receptors were activated by passive eye movement within the pigeon's saccadic range; such movements modified the vestibular responses of all 19 units studied which were all, histologically, in the abducens nucleus. The magnitude of the effects, purely inhibitory in 15 units, depended both on the amplitude and the velocity of the eye movement and most units showed selectivity for particular combinations of plane (e.g. horizontal versus vertical) and direction (e.g. rostral versus caudal) of eye movement. The results show that an afferent signal from the extraocular muscles influences vestibularly driven activity in the abducens nucleus to which it carries information related to amplitude, velocity, plane and direction of eye movement in the saccadic range. They thus strongly support the view that extraocular afferent signals are involved in the control of eye movement.  相似文献   

8.
1. The depolarizing effectiveness of azelainylcholine (AzCh, a 7-C-chain dicholine) is about 10 times higher than that of succinylcholine (SCh, a 2-C-chain dicholine) in skeletal muscles of chick, frog and fish, and in body muscles of the earthworm. 2. In the chicken anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) muscle, AzCh is about 100 times more effective than SCh. 3. In contrast to that in mammalian muscles, the AzCh-SCh sensitivity difference is not increased by denervation in frog muscles. 4. d-Tubocurarine is equally effective in the ALD and in other chicken muscles; its effectiveness is not decreased by denervation in frog muscles. 5. Cells containing muscarinic acetylcholine receptors are weakly sensitive to dicholines or not at all.  相似文献   

9.
Binocular vision requires intricate control of eye movement to align overlapping visual fields for fusion in the visual cortex, and each eye is controlled by 6 extraocular muscles (EOMs). Disorders of EOMs are an important cause of symptomatic vision loss. Importantly, EOMs represent specialized skeletal muscles with distinct gene expression profile and susceptibility to neuromuscular disorders. We aim to investigate and describe the anatomy of adult zebrafish extraocular muscles (EOMs) to enable comparison with human EOM anatomy and facilitate the use of zebrafish as a model for EOM research. Using differential interference contrast (DIC), epifluorescence microscopy, and precise sectioning techniques, we evaluate the anatomy of zebrafish EOM origin, muscle course, and insertion on the eye. Immunofluorescence is used to identify components of tendons, basement membrane and neuromuscular junctions (NMJs), and to analyze myofiber characteristics. We find that adult zebrafish EOM insertions on the globe parallel the organization of human EOMs, including the close proximity of specific EOM insertions to one another. However, analysis of EOM origins reveals important differences between human and zebrafish, such as the common rostral origin of both oblique muscles and the caudal origin of the lateral rectus muscles. Thrombospondin 4 marks the EOM tendons in regions that are highly innervated, and laminin marks the basement membrane, enabling evaluation of myofiber size and distribution. The NMJs appear to include both en plaque and en grappe synapses, while NMJ density is much higher in EOMs than in somatic muscles. In conclusion, zebrafish and human EOM anatomy are generally homologous, supporting the use of zebrafish for studying EOM biology. However, anatomic differences exist, revealing divergent evolutionary pressures.  相似文献   

10.
Summary 1. Two types of muscle fibers, red (-slow) and white (-twitch), have been described in the extraocular muscles of Carassius and Rana, respectively. 2. Red and white muscle fibers occupy a definite position in particular eye muscles and occur in almost constant numerical relation. 3. The red fibers in the fish extraocular muscles are supposedly slow. The position of the triads is at the level of the A/I junction, whereas that of the white muscle fibers is at the Z line level. 4. In the frog the extraocular muscles consist of two types of muscle fibers, which have morphological features of slow and fast fibers, respectively, the triads being localized at the Z line level.This work has been supported by the Polish Academy of Sciences.Authors express their thanks to Doc. Dr. J. Kawiak for help in densitometrography.  相似文献   

11.
Type 2 diabetes is preceded by the presence of skeletal muscle insulin resistance, and drugs that increase insulin sensitivity in skeletal muscle prevent the disease. S15511 is an original compound with demonstrated effects on insulin sensitivity in animal models of insulin resistance. However, the mechanisms behind the insulin-sensitizing effect of S15511 are unknown. The aim of our study was to explore whether S15511 improves insulin sensitivity in skeletal muscles. Insulin sensitivity was assessed in skeletal muscles from S15511-treated rats by measuring intracellular insulin-signaling activity and insulin-stimulated glucose transport in isolated muscles. In addition, GLUT4 expression and glycogen levels were assessed after treatment. S15511 treatment was associated with an increase in insulin-stimulated glucose transport in type IIb fibers, while type I fibers were unaffected. The enhanced glucose transport was mirrored by a fiber type-specific increase in GLUT4 expression, while no improvement in insulin-signaling activity was observed. S15511 is a novel insulin sensitizer that is capable of improving glucose homeostasis in nondiabetic rats. The compound enhances skeletal muscle insulin sensitivity and specifically targets type IIb muscle fibers by increasing GLUT4 expression. Together these data show S15511 to be a potentially promising new drug in the treatment and prevention of type 2 diabetes.  相似文献   

12.
This article describes current views on motor and sensory control of extraocular muscles (EOMs) based on anatomical data. The special morphology of EOMs, including their motor innervation, is described in comparison to classical skeletal limb and trunk muscles. The presence of proprioceptive organs is reviewed with emphasis on the palisade endings (PEs), which are unique to EOMs, but the function of which is still debated. In consideration of the current new anatomical data about the location of cell bodies of PEs, a hypothesis on the function of PEs in EOMs and the multiply innervated muscle fibres they are attached to is put forward.  相似文献   

13.
The volume occupied by the extracellular space has been investigated in six types of voluntary muscles: sartorius (frog), semitendinosus (frog), tibialis anticus longus (frog), iliofibularis (frog), rectus abdominis (frog), and diaphragm (rat). With the aid of four types of probe material, three of which are conventionally employed (inulin, sorbitol, sucrose) and one of which is newly introduced (poly-L-glutamate), and a different experimental method, we have demonstrated that the "true" extracellular space of frog sartorius, semitendinosus, tibialis anticus longus, and iliofibularis muscle and of rat diaphragm muscle is equal to, or probably less than, 8-9% (v/w) of the tissue. The frog rectus muscle shows a somewhat higher ceiling value of 14%.  相似文献   

14.
Recent work has provided measurements of power output in avian skeletal muscles during running and flying, but little is known about the contractile properties of avian skeletal muscle. We used an in situ preparation to characterize the force-velocity properties of two hind limb muscles, the lateral gastrocnemius (LG) and peroneus longus (PL), in Wild Turkeys (Meleagris gallopavo). A servomotor measured shortening velocity for at least six different loads over the plateau region of the length-tension curve. The Hill equation was fit to the data to determine maximum shortening velocity and peak instantaneous power. Maximum unloaded shortening velocity was 13.0+/-1.6 L s(-1) for the LG muscle and 14.8+/-1.0 L s(-1) for the PL muscle (mean+/-S.E.M.). These velocities are within the range of values published for reptilian and mammalian muscles. Values recorded for maximum isometric force per cross-sectional area, 271+/-28 kPa for the LG and 257+/-30.5 kPa for the PL, and peak instantaneous power output, 341.7+/-36.4 W kg(-1) for the LG and 319.4+/-42.5 W kg(-1) for the PL, were also within the range of published values for vertebrate muscle. The force-velocity properties of turkey LG and PL muscle do not reveal any extreme differences in the mechanical potential between avian and other vertebrate muscle.  相似文献   

15.
The optically recorded action potentials of the frog atrial muscles which lack transverse tubules showed different features from those reported by Heiny and Vergara (Heiny JA, Vergara J. Optical signals from surface and T system membranes in skeletal muscle fibers. J Gen Physiol 1982;80:203-230) in skeletal muscles (Fujishiro N, Kawata H. The wavelength dependence of optically recorded action potentials in the atrial muscles of the bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana). Comp Biochem Physiol 1996;114A:153-157). We examined whether or not the differences were consistent in other atrial muscles which lack transverse tubules with guinea pig atrial muscles. Two dyes (merocyanine rhodanine and merocyanine oxazolone) were used, and the dependence of the maximum rising phase of the optical signals on the wavelength of the incident beam was analyzed. No dependence was observed between them, and this finding was consistent with the structure of the membrane system of the guinea pig atrial muscles. The optical signals recorded at 718 nm of the incident beam from the guinea pig atrial muscles which stained with merocyanine oxazolone showed a more prominent second rising phase after the initial rapid rising phase of the optical signal than that recorded in the frog atrial muscles. This phase was not observed in the optical signals recorded at other wavelengths. The features of the optically recorded action potentials in guinea pig atrial muscles were consistent with those recorded in frog atrial muscles. Nifedipine did not affect the second rising phase.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Duchenne muscular dystrophy is the most frequent neuromuscular disorder of childhood. Although this x-linked muscle disease is extremely progressive, not all subtypes of skeletal muscles are affected in the same way. While extremities and trunk muscles are drastically weakened, extraocular muscles are usually spared in Duchenne patients. In order to determine the global protein expression pattern in these naturally protected muscles we have performed a comparative proteomic study of the established mdx mouse model of x-linked muscular dystrophy. Fluorescence difference in-gel electrophoretic analysis of 9-week-old dystrophin-deficient versus age-matched normal extraocular muscle, using a pH 4-7 gel range, identified out of 1088 recognized protein spots a moderate expression change in only seven protein species. Desmin, apolipoprotein A-I binding protein and perilipin-3 were found to be increased and gelsolin, gephyrin, transaldolase, and acyl-CoA dehydrogenase were shown to be decreased in mdx extraocular muscles. Immunoblotting revealed a drastic up-regulation of utrophin, comparable levels of β-dystroglycan and key Ca2+-regulatory elements, and an elevated concentration of small stress proteins in mdx extraocular muscles. This suggests that despite the lack of dystrophin only a limited number of cellular systems are perturbed in mdx extraocular muscles, probably due to the substitution of dystrophin by its autosomal homolog. Utrophin appears to prevent the loss of dystrophin-associated proteins and Ca2+-handling elements in extraocular muscle tissue. Interestingly, the adaptive mechanisms that cause the sparing of extraocular fibers seem to be closely linked to an enhanced cellular stress response.  相似文献   

18.
Bending, twitching and quivering are different types of tentacle movements observed during olfactory orientation of the snail. Three recently discovered special muscles, spanning along the length of superior tentacles from the tip to the base, seem to be responsible for the execution of these movements. In this study we have investigated the ultrastructure, contractile properties and protein composition of these muscles. Our ultrastructural studies show that smooth muscle fibers are loosely embedded in a collagen matrix and they are coupled with long sarcolemma protrusions. The muscle fibers apparently lack organized SR and transverse tubular system. Instead subsarcolemmal vesicles and mitochondria have been shown to be possible Ca2+ pools for contraction. It was shown that external Ca2+ is required for contraction elicited by high (40 mM) K+ or 10-4 M ACh. Caffeine (5 mM) induced contraction in Ca2+-free solution suggesting the presence of a substantial intracellular Ca2+ pool. High-resolution electrophoretic analysis of columellar and tentacular muscles did not reveal differences in major contractile proteins, such as actin, myosin and paramyosin. Differences were observed however in several bands representing presumably regulatory enzymes. It is concluded that, the ultrastructural, biochemical and contractile properties of the string muscles support their special physiological function.  相似文献   

19.
Animals that undergo prolonged dormancy experience minimal muscle disuse atrophy (MDA) compared to animals subjected to artificial immobilisation over shorter timeframes. An association between oxidative stress and MDA suggests that metabolic depression presumably affords dormant animals some protection against muscle disuse. Because aerobic metabolism is temperature sensitive, we proposed that MDA in dormant (aestivating) ectotherms would be enhanced at elevated temperatures. In the green‐striped burrowing frog, Cyclorana alboguttata, the thermal sensitivity of skeletal muscle metabolic rate is muscle‐specific. We proposed that the degree of atrophy experienced during aestivation would correlate with the thermal sensitivity of muscle metabolic rate such that muscles with a relatively high metabolic rate at high temperatures would experience more disuse atrophy. To test this hypothesis, we examined the effect of temperature and aestivation on the extent of MDA in two functionally different muscles: the M. gastrocnemius (jumping muscle) and M. iliofibularis (non‐jumping muscle), in C. alboguttata aestivating at 24 or 30°C for 6 months. We compared a range of morphological parameters from muscle cross‐sections stained with succinic dehydrogenase to show that muscle‐specific patterns of disuse atrophy were consistent with the relative rates of oxygen consumption of those muscle types. However, despite muscle‐specific differences in thermal sensitivity of metabolic rate, aestivation temperature did not influence the extent of atrophy in either muscle. Our results suggest that the muscles of frogs aestivating at high temperatures are defended against additional atrophy ensuring protection of muscle function during long periods of immobilisation. J. Morphol., 2013. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
The influences of octanoic, decanoic, and hexadencanoic acid were tested on the contracture capability of isolated skeletal muscle of frogs and rats. 1. 100 mM octanoic or 10mM decanoic acid induce contractures in skeletal mucles after 20-30 min of exposure. 2. The time of exposure necessary for induction of contractures is shortened by an increase of bath temperature, electrical stimulation or KCl-depolarization of muscles. 3. Simultaneous addition of fatty acid and caffeine (10 mM) effects a depression and a delay of the caffeine contracture. The contractures evoked by 5 mM caffeine are inhibited by lower concentrations of fatty acids (1 mM octaonoic acid, 0,1 mM hexadecanoic acid). 4. After the complete development of a caffeine (or fatty acid) contracture the muscle is not able to develop an identical contracture by a second application of the same drug, even after intermediate treatment during one or two hours in Ringer solution. If the contracture is interrupted one minute after the caffeine application by changing the solution, the tension returns quickly to the resting level. A subsequent addition of caffeine (10 mM) after about 10 minutes effects an identical contracture. Thus the effect of fatty acids on caffeine contracture may be studied on the same muscle which served as its own control. 5. As mechanisms involved in the development of fatty acid contractures and in the inhibition of caffeine contractures, interactions of free fatty acids and lipids of biological membranes are disucssed. Especially, there may be changes of the calcium affinity of cellular membranes.  相似文献   

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