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1.
Mammalian skeletal muscles with long fascicle lengths are predominantly composed of short muscle fibers that terminate midbelly with no direct connection to the muscle origin or insertion. The manner in which these short fibers terminate and transmit tension through the muscle to their tendons is poorly understood. We made an extensive morphological study of a series-fibered muscle, the guinea pig sternomastoid, in order to define the full range of structural specializations for tension transmission from short fibers within this muscle. Terminations were examined in single fibers, teased small bundles of fibers, and in sections at both the light and electron microscopic level. In many cases, sites of fiber termination were defined by reactivity for the enzyme acetylcholinesterase, which also marks myotendinous junctions. Additionally, transport of the lipophilic fluorescent dye, DiI, or injection of Lucifer Yellow were used to visualize undisturbed fiber terminations in whole muscles using confocal and fluorescence microscopy. At the light microscopic level, we find that intrafascicularly terminating fibers end about equally often in either a long progressive taper, or in a series of small or larger blunt steps. Combinations of these two morphologies are also seen. However, when analyzed at higher resolution with confocal or electron microscopy, the apparently smooth progressive tapers appear also to be predominantly composed of a series of fine stepped terminations. Stepwise terminations in most cases join face-to-face with complementary endings of neighboring muscle fibers, some via an extended collagenous bridge and others at close interdigitating myomyonal junctions. These muscle-to-muscle junctions show many of the features of myotendinous junctions, including dense subsarcolemmal plaques in regions of myofibrillar termination and we suggest that they serve to pass tension from fiber to fiber along the longitudinal axis of the muscle. In addition, we observe regions of apparent side-to-side adhesion between neighboring fibers at sites where there is no apparent fiber tapering or structural specialization typical of myofibril termination. These sites show acetylcholinesterase reactivity, and large numbers of collagen fibers passing laterally from fiber to fiber. These latter connections seem most likely to be involved in lateral transmission of tension, either from fiber to fiber, or from fiber to endomysium. Overall, our results suggest that tension from intrafascicularly terminating fibers is likely to be passed along the muscle to the tendon using both in-series and in-parallel arrangements. The results are discussed in light of current theories of tension delivery within the series-fibered muscles typical of large, nonprimate mammals.  相似文献   

2.
Zhang C  Gao Y 《Journal of biomechanics》2012,45(11):2001-2006
Most of the myofibers in long muscles of vertebrates terminate within fascicles without reaching either end of the tendon, thus force generated in myofibers has to be transmitted laterally through the extracellular matrix (ECM) to adjacent fibers; which is defined as the lateral transmission of force in skeletal muscles. The goal of this study was to determine the mechanisms of lateral transmission of force between the myofiber and ECM. In this study, a 2D finite element model of single muscle fiber was developed to study the effects of mechanical properties of the endomysium and the tapered ends of myofiber on lateral transmission of force. Results showed that most of the force generated is transmitted near the end of the myofiber through shear to the endomysium, and the force transmitted to the end of the model increases with increased stiffness of ECM. This study also demonstrated that the tapered angle of the myofiber ends can reduce the stress concentration near the myofiber end while laterally transmitting force efficiently.  相似文献   

3.
Functional properties of the diaphragm are mediated by muscle structure. Modeling of force transmission necessitates a precise knowledge of muscle fiber architecture. Because the diaphragm experiences loads both along and transverse to the long axes of its muscle fibers in vivo, the mechanism of force transmission may be more complex than in other skeletal muscles that are loaded uniaxially along the muscle fibers. Using a combination of fiber microdissections and histological and morphological methods, we determined regional muscle fiber architecture and measured the shape of the cell membrane of single fibers isolated from diaphragm muscles from 11 mongrel dogs. We found that muscle fibers were either spanning fibers (SPF), running uninterrupted between central tendon (CT) and chest wall (CW), or were non-spanning fibers (NSF) that ended within the muscle fascicle. NSF accounted for the majority of fibers in the midcostal, dorsal costal, and lateral crural regions but were only 25-41% of fibers in the sternal region. In the midcostal and dorsal costal regions, only approximately 1% of the NSF terminated within the fascicle at both ends; the lateral crural region contained no such fibers. We measured fiber length, tapered length, fiber diameters along fiber length, and the taper angle for 271 fibers. The lateral crural region had the longest mean length of SPF, which is equivalent to the mean muscle length, followed by the costal and sternal regions. For the midcostal and crural regions, the percentage of tapered length of NSF was 45.9 +/- 5.3 and 40.6 +/- 7.5, respectively. The taper angle was approximately 0.15 degrees for both, and, therefore, the shear component of force was approximately 380 times greater than the tensile component. When the diaphragm is submaximally activated, as during normal breathing and maximal inspiratory efforts, muscle forces could be transmitted to the cell membrane and to the extracellular intramuscular connective tissue by shear linkage, presumably via structural transmembrane proteins.  相似文献   

4.
The extensibility of the sarcolemma of single myofibers can be reduced locally by leaving a segment covered by a sleeve of surrounding tissue composed of cut myofibers, blood vessels, and connective tissue, hereafter referred to as “the splint.” Splinted fibers from frog semitendinosus muscle were used to study mechanical connections (transverse coupling) between myofibrillar components and sarcolemma. The transverse coupling is strong enough to insure a tight correlation between myofibril length and overlying sarcolemma length in both resting and activated fibers and to transmit nearly maximum isometric tension to the splint. Lateral transmission of active tension was demonstrated with a preparation which had the distal two-thirds of an intact fiber covered by a splint and the proximal third dissected clean. When the outer end of the splint was pinned down and only the distal tendon was held, tension generated in the splinted fiber was transmitted to, and recorded from, the splint. Parameters of isometric tension transmitted laterally were not significantly different from those of tension transmitted longitudinally. Myofibrils branch profusely and form a network that may act as a unitary force generator and transmitter. In splinted fibers its output is possibly picked up circumferentially and transmitted across the sarcolemma by a microfilament network. A cap of relatively inextensible sarcolemma “splints” myofiber ends. Resting tension is transmitted to and from the myofibrils by transverse coupling beyond the cap and the region of short sarcomere spacing it covers. Transverse cytoskeletal connections at Z and M regions are described. Immobilization of the sarcolemma allows study of myofibril-sarcolemma linkage in intact libers. Both active and resting tension were transmitted laterally.  相似文献   

5.
The goal of this work was to create a finite element micromechanical model of the myotendinous junction (MTJ) to examine how the structure and mechanics of the MTJ affect the local micro-scale strains experienced by muscle fibers. We validated the model through comparisons with histological longitudinal sections of muscles fixed in slack and stretched positions. The model predicted deformations of the A-bands within the fiber near the MTJ that were similar to those measured from the histological sections. We then used the model to predict the dependence of local fiber strains on activation and the mechanical properties of the endomysium. The model predicted that peak micro-scale strains increase with activation and as the compliance of the endomysium decreases. Analysis of the models revealed that, in passive stretch, local fiber strains are governed by the difference of the mechanical properties between the fibers and the endomysium. In active stretch, strain distributions are governed by the difference in cross-sectional area along the length of the tapered region of the fiber near the MTJ. The endomysium provides passive resistance that balances the active forces and prevents the tapered region of the fiber from undergoing excessive strain. These model predictions lead to the following hypotheses: (i) the increased likelihood of injury during active lengthening of muscle fibers may be due to the increase in peak strain with activation and (ii) endomysium may play a role in protecting fibers from injury by reducing the strains within the fiber at the MTJ.  相似文献   

6.
To confirm the existence of epimuscular myofascial force transmission in humans, this study examined if manipulating joint angle to stretch the muscle can alter the shear modulus of a resting adjacent muscle, and whether there are regional differences in this response. The biceps brachii (BB: manipulated muscle) and the brachialis (BRA: resting adjacent muscle) were deemed suitable for this study because they are neighboring, yet have independent tendons that insert onto different bones. In order to manipulate the muscle length of BB only, the forearm was passively set at supination, neutral, and pronation positions. For thirteen healthy young adult men, the shear modulus of BB and BRA was measured with shear-wave elastography at proximal and distal muscle regions for each forearm position and with the elbow joint angle at either 100° or 160°. At both muscle regions and both elbow positions, BB shear modulus increased as the forearm was rotated from a supinated to pronated position. Conversely, BRA shear modulus decreased as function of forearm position. The effect of forearm position on shear modulus was most pronounced in the distal muscle region when the elbow was at 160°. The observed alteration of shear modulus of the resting adjacent muscle indicates that epimuscular myofascial force transmission is present in the human upper limb. Consistent with this assertion, we found that the effect of muscle length on shear modulus in both muscles was region-dependent. Our results also suggest that epimuscular myofascial force transmission may be facilitated at stretched muscle lengths.  相似文献   

7.
Force transmission from muscle fibers via the connective tissue network (i.e., myofascial force transmission) is an important determinant of muscle function. This study investigates the role of myofascial pathways for force transmission from multitendoned extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle within an intact anterior crural compartment. Effects of length changes exclusively of head III of rat EDL muscle (EDL III) on myofascial force transmission were assessed. EDL III was lengthened at the distal tendon. For different lengths of EDL III, isometric forces were measured at the distal tendon of EDL III, as well as at the proximal tendon of whole EDL and at the distal tendons of tibialis anterior and extensor hallucis longus (TA+EHL) muscles. Lengthening of EDL III caused high changes in force exerted at the distal tendon of EDL III (from 0 to 1.03 +/- 0.07 N). In contrast, only minor changes were found in force exerted at the proximal EDL tendon (from 2.37 +/- 0.09 to 2.53 +/- 0.10 N). Increasing the length of EDL III decreased TA+EHL force significantly (by 7%, i.e., from 5.62 +/- 0.27 to 5.22 +/- 0.32 N). These results show that force is transmitted between EDL III and adjacent tissues via myofascial pathways. Optimal force exerted at the distal tendon of EDL III (1.03 +/- 0.07 N) was more than twice the force expected on the basis of the physiological cross-sectional area of EDL III muscle fibers (0.42 N). Therefore, a substantial fraction of this force must originate from sources other than EDL III. It is concluded that myofascial pathways play an important role in force transmission from multitendoned muscles.  相似文献   

8.
Stiffness and force in activated frog skeletal muscle fibers.   总被引:2,自引:3,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Single fibers, isolated intact from frog skeletal muscles, were held firmly very near to each end by stiff metal clasps fastened to the tendons. The fibers were then placed horizontally between two steel hooks inserted in eyelets of the tendon clasps. One hook was attached to a capacitance gauge force transducer (resonance frequency up to approximately 50 kHz) and the other was attached to a moving-coil length changer. This allowed us to impose small, rapid releases (complete in less than 0.15 ms) and high frequency oscillations (up to 13 kHz) to one end of a resting or contracting fiber and measure the consequences at the other end with fast time resolution at 4 to 6 degrees C. The stiffness of short fibers (1.8-2.6 mm) was determined directly from the ratio of force to length variations produced by the length changer. The resonance frequency of short fibers was so high (approximately 40 kHz) that intrinsic oscillations were not detectably excited. The stiffness of long fibers, on the other hand, was calculated from measurement of the mechanical resonance frequency of a fiber. Using both short and long fibers, we measured the sinusoids of force at one end of a contracting fiber that were produced by relatively small sinusoidal length changes at the other end. The amplitudes of the sinusoidal length changes were small compared with the size of step changes that produce nonlinear force-extension relations. The sinusoids of force from long fibers changed amplitude and shifted phase with changes in oscillation frequency in a manner expected of a transmission line composed of mass, compliance, and viscosity, similar to that modelled by (Ford, L. E., A. F. Huxley, and R. M. Simmons, 1981, J. Physiol. (Lond.), 311:219-249). A rapid release during the plateau of tetanic tension in short fibers caused a fall in force and stiffness, a relative change in stiffness that putatively was much smaller than that of force. Our results are, for the most part, consistent with the cross-bridge model of force generation proposed by Huxley, A. F., and R. M. Simmons (1971, Nature (Lond.), 213:533-538). However, stiffness in short fibers developed markedly faster than force during the tetanus rise. Thus our findings show the presence of one or more noteworthy cross-bridge states at the onset and during the rise of active tension towards a plateau in that attachment apparently is followed by a relatively long delay before force generation occurs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
10.
The effects of inter- and extramuscular myofascial force transmission on muscle length force characteristics were studied in rat. Connective tissues at the bellies of the experimental synergistic muscles of the anterior crural compartment were left intact. Extensor digitorium longus (EDL) muscle was lengthened distally whereas tibialis anterior (TA) and extensor hallucis longus (EHL) were kept at constant muscle–tendon complex length. Substantial differences were found in EDL force measured at the proximal and distal tendons (maximally 46% of the proximal force). EDL with intact inter- as well as extramuscular connections had an increased length range between active slack and optimum length compared to EDL with extramuscular connections exclusively: optimum muscle length was shifted by more than 2 mm. Distal EDL lengthening caused the distal force exerted by TA+EHL complex to decrease (approximately 17% of the initial force). This indicates increased intermuscular myofascial force transmission from TA+EHL muscle complex to EDL muscle.

Finite-element modeling showed that: (1) Inter- and extramuscular myofascial force transmission leads to a substantial distribution of the lengths of the sarcomeres arranged in series within muscle fibers. Distribution of stress within the muscle fibers showed that the muscle fiber cannot be considered as a unit exerting equal forces at both ends. (2) Increased heterogeneity of mean fiber sarcomere lengths (i.e., a “parallel” distribution of length of sarcomeres among different muscle fibers) is found, particularly at high muscle lengths. This also explains the shift in muscle optimum length to higher lengths.

It is concluded that inter- and extramuscular myofascial force transmission has substantial effects on muscle length–force characteristics.  相似文献   


11.
The muscle fibers of the feline biceps femoris have tapered ends, across which tension is transmitted to the endomysium. The angle of taper of 11 ends, measured on scanning electron micrographs, varied between 0.16 degrees and 1.18 degrees. The muscle fibers are highly variable in cross-sectional shape. The shape of the fibers has been quantified as the ratio (form factor [FF]) of the measured perimeter to the calculated circumference of a circle having an area equal to that contained by the fiber perimeter. The FF for 173 terminal portions of fibers varied between 1.06 and 1.85 and was found to have a highly significant negative correlation with sarcomere length. The slope of the regression line suggests that the fibers maintain both volume and surface area as they change length. These studies suggest that isovolumic muscle fibers maintain a constant surface area by changing shape as they change length.  相似文献   

12.
Non-primate mammalian muscles with fascicles above 35 mm in length are composed predominantly of arrays of short, non-spanning muscle fibres, which terminate within the belly of the muscle fascicle at one or both ends. We have previously described the morphological form of various muscle-to-muscle and muscle-to-matrix junctions which are likely involved in tension transmission within one such muscle - the guinea pig sternomastoid muscle (Young et al. 2000). Here, we use immunohistochemistry to investigate the cell adhesion molecules present at these junctions. We find strong immunoreactivity against the alpha 7B integrin subunit and dystrophin, and slight reactivity against the alpha 7A integrin at all intrafascicular fibre terminations (IFTs), as well as at the muscle-tendon junction (MTJ). Tenascin, the sole ligand for alpha 9 beta 1 integrin, was absent from IFTs but present at the MTJ, suggesting the two sites are molecularly distinct. In addition to their expression at junctional sites, alpha 7B integrin and dystrophin were also expressed ubiquitously along the non-junctional sarcolemma, suggesting potential involvement in diffuse lateral transmission of tension between adjacent fibres. We conclude that the distribution of alpha 7 beta 1 integrins and dystrophin in series-fibred muscles suggests they are involved in transmission of tension from intrafascicularly terminating fibres to neighbouring fibres lying both in-series and in-parallel, via the extracellular matrix (ECM).  相似文献   

13.
Many skeletal muscles, including the feline biceps femoris, are composed of short, tapered myofibers arranged in an overlapping longitudinal series. The endomysium of such muscles transfers tension between overlapping myofibers, and is thus an elastic element in series with them. The endomysium of the cat biceps femoris contains curvilinear collagen fibrils in an approximately isotropic (random) array. The collagen fibrils undergo only a modest reorientation as the myofibers shorten or lengthen within the physiological range. A geometrical model predicts no change in the thickness of the endomysium on changing muscle fiber length and quantifies the expected collagen fibril reorientation in the endomysium as a function of muscle extension. It is also demonstrated that a high proportion of the collagen fibrils will be curvilinear at all sarcomere lengths. The organization of endomysial collagen is appropriate for the transfer of loads between myofibers by means of shear.  相似文献   

14.
Most models of in vivo musculoskeletal function fail to take into account the diversity of force trajectories defined by muscle fiber architecture. It has been shown for many muscles, across species, that muscle fibers commonly end within muscle fascicles without reaching a myotendinous junction, and that many of these fibers show a progressive decline in cross-sectional area along the length of the muscle. The significance of these anatomical observations is that the tapering would seem to preclude forces generated at the largest cross-sectional area of the fibers being transmitted to the sarcomeres toward the ends of the tapered fiber. If all of the forces are transmitted via the sarcomeres arranged in series, those few sarcomeres at the smaller ends of the fibers must tolerate the stress exerted by the more numerous sarcomeres arranged in parallel at the portions of the fiber with larger cross-sectional areas. A logical alternative would be for forces to be transmitted laterally along the length of a fiber to the cell membrane and the extracellular matrix. Such a structural arrangement would permit an alternative force transmission vector and minimize the necessity for a precise level of force to be generated along the entire length of a fiber. There are cytoarchitectural and biochemical data demonstrating the presence of a subcellular network which is appropriately located to transmit forces from the active intracellular contractile elements to the extracellular intramuscular connective tissues. However, to fully comprehend how forces are transmitted from individual cross bridges to the tendon, it will be necessary to understand the interactions of all of the components of the muscle tendon complex from the molecular to the multicellular level. It is insufficient to know the physiology of the individual components in a restricted experimental paradigm and assume that these conditions account for the functional characteristics in vivo. Thus, the challenge is to understand how the sarcomeres and all of the associated structures transmit the forces of the whole muscle to its attachments.  相似文献   

15.
Several muscles of the cat hindlimb, including biceps femoris and tenuissimus, are composed of short, in-series muscle fibers with tapered intrafascicular terminations. Tension generation and transmission within such muscles requires that active fibers should be mechanically coupled in series via myomyous junctions, specialized connective tissue attachments, or the endomysium. This report establishes that the tapered fibers of the cat biceps femoris and tenuissimus muscles have insignificant numbers of either myomyous or specialized connective tissue junctions. Tension appears to be transmitted in a distributed manner across the plasmalemma of the tapered (and probably the non-tapered) portions of the fibers to the connective tissue of the endomysium, which is therefore an essential series elastic element in these muscles. Subplasmalemmal dense plaques were identified and may play a role in transmembrane force transmission. In addition to the endomysium, passive muscle fibers may also serve to transmit tension between active fibers, and therefore should also be considered to be series elastic elements.  相似文献   

16.
Physiological and developmental implications of motor unit anatomy   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
There is increasing evidence that the architectural design and arrangement of the fibers within a motor unit have important physiological and developmental ramifications. Limited data, however, are available to directly address this issue. In the present study the physiological properties of one motor unit in each of seven cat tibialis anterior (TA) muscles were determined. Each of these units then was repetitively stimulated to deplete the glycogen in all muscle fibers within the unit. Subsequently, the length, type of ending, and spatial distribution of fibers sampled from these physiologically and histochemically typed motor units were determined. Four fast fatigable (FF), one fast, fatigue resistant (FR), and two slow (S) motor units (MU) were studied. The samples consisted of all those glycogen-depleted fibers (9-27) contained within a single fascicle or a circumscribed area of each of the motor unit territories. The mean fiber lengths for the two slow motor units were 35.9 and 45.5 mm. The mean fiber lengths for the fast motor unit samples ranged from 8.8 to 48.5 mm. Some fibers of both the fast and slow units reached lengths of 58 mm. Most of the fibers in the slow units extended the entire distance between the proximal and distal musculotendinous planes, had relatively constant cross-sectional areas, and terminated at the tendon as blunt endings. In contrast, the majority of the fibers in the fast units terminated intrafascicularly at one end, and the cross-sectional area decreased progressively along their lengths, that is, showed a tapering pattern for a significant proportion of their lengths. Therefore, the force generated by units that end midfascicularly would appear to be transmitted to connective tissue elements and/or adjacent fibers. All fibers of a fast unit within a fascicle were located at approximately the same proximo-distal location. Thus, developmentally the selection of muscle fibers by a motoneuron would seem to be influenced by their spatial distribution. The architectural complexities of motor units also have clear implications for the mechanical interactions of active and inactive motor units. For example, the tension capabilities of a motor unit may be influenced not only by the spatial arrangement of its own fibers, but also by the level of activation of neighboring motor units.  相似文献   

17.
Skeletal muscles display a remarkable diversity in their arrangement of fibers into fascicles and in their patterns of innervation, depending on functional requirements and species differences. Most human muscle fascicles, despite their great length, consist of fibers that extend continuously from one tendon to the other with a single nerve endplate band. Other mammalian muscles have multiple endplate bands and fibers that do not insert into both tendons but terminate intrafascicularly. We investigated whether these alternate structural features may dictate different modes of cell hypertrophy in two mouse gracilis muscles, in response to expression of a muscle-specific insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-1 transgene (mIGF-1) or to chronic exercise. Both hypertrophic stimuli independently activated GATA-2 expression and increased muscle cross-sectional area in both muscle types, with additive effects in exercising myosin light chain/mIGF transgenic mice, but without increasing fiber number. In singly innervated gracilis posterior muscle, hypertrophy was characterized by a greater average diameter of individual fibers, and centralized nuclei. In contrast, hypertrophic gracilis anterior muscle, which is multiply innervated, contained longer muscle fibers, with no increase in average diameter, or in centralized nuclei. Different modes of muscle hypertrophy in domestic and laboratory animals have important implications for building appropriate models of human neuromuscular disease.  相似文献   

18.
Muscle fiber deformation is related to its cellular structure, as well as its architectural arrangement within the musculoskeletal system. While playing an important role in aponeurosis displacement, and efficiency of force transmission to the tendon, such deformation also provides important clues about the underlying mechanical structure of the muscle. We hypothesized that muscle fiber cross section would deform asymmetrically to satisfy the observed constant volume of muscle during a contraction. Velocity-encoded, phase-contrast, and morphological magnetic resonance imaging techniques were used to measure changes in fascicle length, pinnation angle, and aponeurosis separation of the human gastrocnemius muscle during passive and active eccentric ankle joint movements. These parameters were then used to subsequently calculate the in-plane muscle area subtended by the two aponeuroses and fascicles and to calculate the in-plane (dividing area by fascicle length), and through-plane (dividing muscle volume by area) thicknesses. Constant-volume considerations of the whole-muscle geometry require that, as fascicle length increases, the muscle fiber cross-sectional area must decrease in proportion to the length change. Our empirical findings confirm the definition of a constant-volume rule that dictates that changes in the dimension perpendicular to the plane, i.e., through-plane thickness, (-6.0% for passive, -3.3% for eccentric) equate to the reciprocal of the changes in area (6.8% for passive, 3.7% for eccentric) for both exercise paradigms. The asymmetry in fascicle cross-section deformation for both passive and active muscle fibers is established in this study with a ~22% in-plane and ~6% through-plane fascicle thickness change. These fiber deformations have functional relevance, not only because they affect the force production of the muscle itself, but also because they affect the characteristics of adjacent muscles by deflecting their line of pull.  相似文献   

19.
Changes in the 1.0 lattice spacing during trypsin (0.25 micrograms/ml) treatment in mechanically skinned single fibers of frog muscle was examined by an x-ray diffraction method at various sarcomere lengths. The resting tension of a relaxed fiber was decreased by trypsin treatment but the stiffness of a rigor fiber was not, suggesting that elastic components were selectively digested. With progression of the digestion, the lattice spacing increased remarkably at longer sarcomere lengths and finally became independent of the sarcomere length. The increase in the lattice spacing was proportional to the decrease in the resting tension. These results support our previous suggestion (Higuchi, H., and Y. Umazume, 1986, Biophys. J., 50:385-389) that the lattice spacing decreases at long lengths due to compressive force exerted by a lateral elastic component that connects thick filaments to an axial elastic component. Consequently, it is unlikely that the decrease in the lattice spacing is determined by a decrease in the repulsive force between thick and thin filaments with stretching a fiber.  相似文献   

20.
SYNOPSIS. The function of muscles used to generate force economicallyand facilitate elastic energy savings in their tendons is comparedwith muscles that function to produce mechanical power. Theunderlying architectural design of the muscle and its tendon(if present) dictate much of their functional capacity and rolein animal locomotion. Using methods that allow direct recordingsof muscle force and fiber length change, the functional designof muscle-tendon systems can now be investigated in vivo. Thesestudies reveal that, in the case of wallaby hindleg muscles,the fibers can maintain sufficient stiffness during tendon stretchand recoil to ensure useful elastic energy recovery and savingsof metabolic energy. In the case of the pectoralis muscle ofpigeons, although isometric or active lengthening of the muscle'sfibers may occur late in the upstroke of the wing beat cycleto enhance force development, the fibers shorten extensivelyduring the downstroke (up to 35% of their resting length) toproduce mechanical power for aerodynamic lift and thrust. Oscillatorylength change, with force enhancement during active lengtheningmay be a general feature of muscles that power aerial and aquaticlocomotion. Similarly, force enhancement by active lengtheningis likely to be important to the design and function of musclesthat primarily generate force to minimize energy expenditure/unitforce generated, as well as for elastic energy savings withina long tendon. Architectural features of muscle-tendon unitsfor effective elastic energy savings, however, are likely toconstrain locomotor performance when mechanical work is required,as when an animal accelerates, either limiting performance orrequiring the recruitment of functional agonists with greatermechanical power generating capability (i.e., longer fibers)  相似文献   

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