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1.
Crustacean Neuromuscular Mechanisms   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Properties of crustacean muscle fibers and neuromuscular synapsesare discussed, with particular reference to the problems offast and slow contraction, synaptic diversity, and peripheralinhibition. Electrical and mechanical responses of crustacean muscle fibersare variable, and govern to a large extent the muscle's performance.Fast and slow contractions are often mediated by distinct "phasic"and "tonic" muscle fibers, as in abdominal muscles, in whichsuch fibers are segregated into two parallel sets of muscles.In leg muscles the fibers are often heterogeneous in propertiesand innervation. In doubly-motor-innervated muscles of crabsthe axons producing fast and slow contractions preferentiallyinnervate rapidly and slowly contracting fibers, respectively. Crustacean neuromuscular synapses vary greatly in electricalbehavior and in ultrastructural characteristics. Some motoraxons possess both facilitating and nonfacilitating synapses.The proportion of the different types of synapse associatedwith a motor axon probably determines in large measure the propertiesof the postsynaptic potentials evoked by that axon. Pre-synaptic and post-synaptic inhibition both occur, sometimesin the same muscle. The latter type is more common. Pre-synapticinhibition is thought to be mediated by the action of an inhibitorytransmitter-substance on receptors of the motor nerve terminals.  相似文献   

2.
The properties of the penis retractor muscle of Aplysia have been studied using intracellular, sucrose gap and tension recording. The fibers are of the invertebrate smooth muscle type and exhibit slow contractions which occur spontaneously or in response to stretch in isolated preparations. Individual muscle fibers are innervated by excitatory and inhibitory axons. A variety of sizes of excitatory and inhibitory junctional potentials can be recorded from them. The innervation is probably diffuse and functionally polyneuronal. The fibers are electrically coupled, permeable to potassium and chloride at rest, and exhibit no overshooting active responses. The muscle shows graded responses of depolarization and contraction proportional to strength of nerve stimulation. Facilitation and depression of junctional potentials are seen with various frequencies of nerve stimulation. Post-tetanic potentiation occurs with nerve stimulation at frequencies from 2 to 50 Hz and is suppressed in the presence of increased extracellular calcium concentrations.  相似文献   

3.
In this study, we tested the hypothesis that skeletal muscle from pigeons would display age-related alterations in isometric force and contractile parameters as well as a shift of the single muscle fiber cross-sectional area (CSA) distribution toward smaller fiber sizes. Maximal force output, twitch contraction durations and the force–frequency relationship were determined in tensor propatagialis pars biceps muscle from young 3-year-old pigeons, middle-aged 18-year-old pigeons, and aged 30-year-old pigeons. The fiber CSA distribution was determined by planimetry from muscle sections stained with hematoxylin and eosin. Maximal force output of twitch and tetanic contractions was greatest in muscles from young pigeons, while the time to peak force of twitch contractions was longest in muscles from aged pigeons. There were no changes in the force–frequency relationship between the age groups. Interestingly, the fiber CSA distribution in aged muscles revealed a greater number of larger sized muscle fibers, which was verified visually in histological images. Middle-aged and aged muscles also displayed a greater amount of slow myosin containing muscle fibers. These data demonstrate that muscles from middle-aged and aged pigeons are susceptible to alterations in contractile properties that are consistent with aging, including lower force production and longer contraction durations. These functional changes were supported by the appearance of slow myosin containing muscle fibers in muscles from middle-aged and aged pigeons. Therefore, the pigeon may represent an appropriate animal model for the study of aging-related alterations in skeletal muscle function and structure.  相似文献   

4.
Sound production in cicadas is powered by a pair of large muscles whose contractions cause buckling of cuticular tymbals and thereby create sound pulses. Sound is modulated by control muscles that alter the stiffness of the tymbals or change the shape of the abdominal resonance chamber. Muscle ultrastructure and contractile properties were characterized for the tymbal muscle and two control muscles, the ventral longitudinal muscle and the tymbal tensor, of the periodical cicada Magicicada septendecim. The tymbal muscle is a fast muscle that is innervated by a single motoraxon. The control muscles are an order of magnitude less massive than the tymbal muscles, but their innervation patterns were considerably more complex. The tensor muscle is innervated by two axons, each of which evokes rather slow twitches, and the ventral muscle is innervated by at least six axons, some of which produce fast and the others slow contractions. Muscle contraction kinetics correlated well with ultrastructure. Fibers of the tymbal muscle and the portions of the ventral muscle thought to be fast were richly supplied with transverse tubules (T-tubules) and sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR); slow portions of the ventral muscle and the tensor muscle had relatively little SR.Abbreviations SR sarcoplasmic reticulum - TTS transverse tubular system - VLM ventral longitudinal muscle  相似文献   

5.
Mixed muscles of adult frogs respond to the increase in external potassium and to Ach by polyphasic contracture which is due to asynchronous activity of various groups of muscle fibers (fast phasic, intermediate and tonic ones). In the developing in vivo hindlimb muscles, the predominance of phasic contractile response and relatively weak tonic one were noted. In contrast to definitive muscles, in which maximum potassium and acetylcholine contractures are identical, growing muscles produce weak contractile reaction to Ach. Ach sensitivity of the developing muscles (as revealed by the contracture) is lower than in the definitive ones. Histochemical (studies on the lipid content and the activity of succinate dehydrogenase) and morphometric (the ratio of muscle fibers of different types at different stages of development, comparison of their diameters, relative size of tonic bundle, etc.) studies indicate that the development of morphological substrate for tonic contractions (tonic and intermediate muscle fibers) takes place at a lower rate as compared to the development of the substrate for phasic contractions. However, histochemically tonic fibers may be revealed already at the stage of myotubes.  相似文献   

6.
There are two pairs of muscles in each abdominal segment of the crab; one pair of flexors and one pair of extensors. In the early larval stages the muscles have short sarcomeres--a property of fast fibers--and high thin to thick filament ratios--a property of slow fibers. In the adult the abdominal muscles are intermediate and slow, since they have fibers with intermediate and long sarcomeres, high thin to thick filament ratios, low myofibrillar ATPase activity, and high NADH diaphorase activity. The different fiber types are regionally distributed within the flexor muscle. Microelectrode recordings from single flexor muscle fibers in the adult showed that most fibers are supplied by three excitatory motor axons, although some are supplied by as many as five efferents. One axon supplies all of the flexor muscle fibers in its own hemisegment, and the evoked junctional potentials exhibit depression. This feature together with the innervation patterns of the fibers are similar to those reported for the deep flexor muscles of crayfish and lobsters. Therefore, in the adult crab, the abdominal flexor muscles have some features in common with the slow superficial flexors of crayfish and other features in common with the fast deep flexor muscles.  相似文献   

7.
Gliding flight is a postural activity which requires the wings to be held in a horizontal position to support the weight of the body. Postural behaviors typically utilize isometric contractions in which no change in length takes place. Due to longer actin-myosin interactions, slow contracting muscle fibers represent an economical means for this type of contraction. In specialized soaring birds, such as vultures and pelicans, a deep layer of the pectoralis muscle, composed entirely of slow fibers, is believed to perform this function. Muscles involved in gliding posture were examined in California gulls (Larus californicus) and tested for the presence of slow fibers using myosin ATPase histochemistry and antibodies. Surprisingly small numbers of slow fibers were found in the M. extensor metacarpi radialis, M. coracobrachialis cranialis, and M. coracobrachialis caudalis, which function in wrist extension, wing protraction, and body support, respectively. The low number of slow fibers in these muscles and the absence of slow fibers in muscles associated with wing extension and primary body support suggest that gulls do not require slow fibers for their postural behaviors. Gulls also lack the deep belly to the pectoralis found in other gliding birds. Since bird muscle is highly oxidative, we hypothesize that fast muscle fibers may function to maintain wing position during gliding flight in California gulls. J. Morphol. 233:237–247, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The stretcher inhibitor motoneuron of each thoracic limb of a crayfish (Pacifastacus leniusculus) was consistently found to innervate parts of the closer muscle, in addition to the stretcher muscle; it is thus not a specific inhibitor as previously thought. The common inhibitory motoneuron also innervates parts of both muscles. Some individual closer muscle fibers are inhibited more strongly by one inhibitor, some by the other, and some fairly equally by both; no general rule governing the inhibitors' closer muscle outputs became evident. In the claw, the distal closer fibres with the longest membrane time constants are all strongly inhibited by the stretcher inhibitor, and some by the common inhibitor as well.No other thoracic limb muscles were found to receive the stretcher inhibitor. The opener inhibitor's effects could be detected only in the opener muscle. The common inhibitor inhibits all walking leg muscles effectively. In the cheliped, it consistently inhibits all except the opener muscle, where its output may be vestigial. Its axon emerges through the ganglion's first root, whereas the opener and stretcher inhibitors' axons pass through the second root. The fast and slow excitatory axons to the extensor muscle also exit separately through the first and second roots, as in locusts.Abbreviations CI common inhibitor - EJP excitatory junctional potential - IJP inhibitory junctional potential - OI opener inhibitor - SI stretcher inhibitor  相似文献   

9.
Development of muscle fiber types in the prenatal rat hindlimb   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Immunohistochemistry was used to examine the expression of embryonic, slow, and neonatal isoforms of myosin heavy chain in muscle fibers of the embryonic rat hindlimb. While the embryonic isoform is present in every fiber throughout prenatal development, by the time of birth the expression of the slow and neonatal isoforms occurs, for the most part, in separate, complementary populations of fibers. The pattern of slow and neonatal expression is highly stereotyped in individual muscles and mirrors the distribution of slow and fast fibers found in the adult. This pattern is not present at the early stages of myogenesis but unfolds gradually as different generations of fibers are added. As has been noted by previous investigators (e.g., Narusawa et al., 1987, J. Cell Biol. 104, 447-459), all of the earliest generation (primary) muscle fibers initially express the slow isoform but some of these primary fibers later lose this expression. In this study we show that loss of slow myosin in these fibers is accompanied by the expression of neonatal myosin. This switch in isoform expression occurs in all primary fibers located in specific regions of particular muscles. However, in other muscles primary fibers which retain their slow expression are extensively intermixed with those that switch to neonatal expression. Later generated (secondary) muscle fibers, which are interspersed among the primary fibers, express neonatal myosin, although a few of them in stereotyped locations later switch from neonatal to slow myosin expression. Many of the observed changes in myosin expression occur coincidentally with the arrival of axons in the limb or the invasion of axons into individual muscles. Thus, although both fiber birth date and intramuscular position are grossly predictive of fiber fate, neither factor is sufficient to account for the final pattern of fiber types seen in the rat hindlimb. The possibility that fiber diversification is dependent upon innervation is tested in the accompanying paper (K. Condon, L. Silberstein, H.M. Blau, and W.J. Thompson, 1990, Dev. Biol. 138, 275-295).  相似文献   

10.
We used immunohistochemistry to examine myosin heavy-chain (MyHC)-based fiber-type profiles of the right and left cricoarytenoideus dorsalis (CAD) and arytenoideus transversus (TrA) muscles of six horses without laryngoscopic evidence of recurrent laryngeal neuropathy (RLN). Results showed that CAD and TrA muscles have the same slow, 2a, and 2x fibers as equine limb muscles, but not the faster contracting fibers expressing extraocular and 2B MyHCs found in laryngeal muscles of small mammals. Muscles from three horses showed fiber-type grouping bilaterally in the TrA muscles, but only in the left CAD. Fiber-type grouping suggests that denervation and reinnervation of fibers had occurred, and that these horses had subclinical RLN. There was a virtual elimination of 2x fibers in these muscles, accompanied by a significant increase in the percentage of 2a and slow fibers, and hypertrophy of these fiber types. The results suggest that multiple pathophysiological mechanisms are at work in early RLN, including selective denervation and reinnervation of 2x muscle fibers, corruption of neural impulse traffic that regulates 2x and slow muscle fiber types, and compensatory hypertrophy of remaining fibers. We conclude that horses afflicted with mild RLN are able to remain subclinical by compensatory hypertrophy of surviving muscle fibers. (J Histochem Cytochem 57:787–800, 2009)  相似文献   

11.
Skeletal muscles can be classified as flexors or extensors according to their function, and as dorsal or ventral according to their position. The latter classification evokes their embryological origin from muscle masses initially divided during limb development, and muscles sharing a given position do not necessarily perform the same function. Here, we compare the relative proportions of different fiber types among six limb muscles in the lizard Tropidurus psammonastes. Individual fibers were classified as slow oxidative (SO), fast glycolytic (FG) or fast oxidative-glycolytic (FOG) based on mitochondrial content; muscles were classified according to position and function. Mixed linear models considering one or both effects were compared using likelihood ratio tests. Variation in the proportion of FG and FOG fibers is mainly explained by function (flexor muscles have on average lower proportions of FG and higher proportions of FOG fibers), while variation in SO fibers is better explained by position (they are less abundant in ventral muscles than in those developed from a dorsal muscle mass). Our results clarify the roles of position and function in determining the relative proportions of the various muscle fibers and provide evidence that these factors may differentially affect distinct fiber types.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Biomechanical macroscopic models of the muscle organ as whole are conceptually limited in explaining muscle function in relation to structure. The examples are Hill-type and rheological muscle models where elastic properties of the muscle's contractible element are approached by a spring arranged in series and parallel, respectively. A new scaling model of the activated muscle powering a particular function is proposed. This model is based on the physical similarity suggested between the action-production muscle force and resulting reaction elastic muscle forces. Considered at a macroscopic scale, this force similarity provides four patterns of constraints in development of muscle architecture in different-sized animals. As the result, the analytical modeling predicts the primary motor, brake, strut and spring functions of individual muscles revealed earlier in work-loop experiments and now provided in terms of the scaling exponents for muscle cross-sectional area and fiber length. The model reliability is tested via literature available from muscle allometric data. The conceptual outcome of the study is that the architecture design of skeletal muscles is likely effected by the powering contractions of last fibers known as having higher myofibril volume than slow fibers.  相似文献   

14.
Chicken leg muscles were examined to calculate the percentages of slow myosin heavy chain (MHC)-positive fibers in spindles and in adjacent extrafusal fascicles, and to clarify how the encapsulated portions of muscle spindles are positioned relative to these fascicles. Unlike mammals, in chicken leg muscles slow-twitch MHC and slow-tonic MHC are expressed in intrafusal fibers and in extrafusal fibers, suggesting a close developmental connection between the two fiber populations. In 8-week-old muscles the proportions of slow MHC-positive extrafusal fibers that ringed muscle spindles ranged from 0-100%. In contrast, proportions of slow MHC-positive intrafusal fibers in spindles ranged from 0-57%. Similar proportions in fiber type composition between intrafusal fibers and surrounding extrafusal fibers were apparent at embryonic days 15 and 16, demonstrating early divergence of extrafusal and intrafusal fibers. Muscle spindles were rarely located within single fascicles. Instead, they were commonly placed where several fascicles converged. The frequent extrafascicular location of spindles suggests migration of intrafusal myoblasts from developing clusters of extrafusal fibers toward the interstitium, perhaps along a neurotrophic gradient established by sensory axons that are advancing in the connective tissue matrix that separates adjoining fascicles.  相似文献   

15.
There are two main differences regarding acetylcholinesterase (AChE) expression in the extrajunctional regions of fast and slow rat muscles: (1) the activity of AChE catalytic subunits (G1 form) is much higher in fast than in slow muscles, and (2) the activity of the asymmetric forms of AChE (A(8) and A(12)) is quite high extrajunctionally in slow muscles but virtually absent in fast muscles. The latter is due to the absence of the expression of AChE-associated collagen Q (ColQ) in the extrajunctional regions of fast muscle fibers, in contrast to its ample expression in slow muscles. We showed that both differences are caused by different neural activation patterns of fast vs. slow muscle fibers, which determine the respective levels of mRNA of both proteins. Whereas the changes in AChE mRNA levels in fast and slow muscles, as well as the levels of ColQ mRNA levels in slow muscles, observed in response to exposing either slow or fast muscles to different muscle activation patterns, are completely reversible, the extrajunctional suppression of ColQ expression in fast muscle fibers seems to be irreversible. Calcineurin signaling pathway in muscles is activated by high-average sarcoplasmic calcium concentration resulting from tonic low-frequency muscle fiber activation pattern, typical for slow muscle fibers, but is inactive in fast muscle fibers, which are activated by infrequent high-frequency bursts of neural impulses. Application to rats of two inhibitors of calcineurin (tacrolimus-FK506 and cyclosporin A) demonstrated that the mRNA levels of both the AChE catalytic subunit and ColQ in the extrajunctional regions of the soleus muscle are regulated by the calcineurin signaling pathway, but in a reciprocal way. Under the conditions of low calcineurin activity, AChE expression is enhanced and that of ColQ is suppressed, and vice versa. Our results also indicated that different, calcineurin-independent regulatory pathways are responsible for the reduction of AChE expression during muscle denervation, and for maintaining high ColQ expression in the neuromuscular junctions of fast muscle fibers.  相似文献   

16.
The neuroanatomical organization of the dynamic (bag1) and static (bag2 and chain) intrafusal systems was compared by light and electron microscopy of serial sections among 71 poles of muscle spindle in soleus (SOL), extensor digitorum longus (EDL), and lumbrical (LUM) muscles in the rat. Eighty-four percent of 195 fusimotor (gamma) axons to the spindles innervated either the dynamic bag1 fiber or the static bag2 and/or chain fibers. Sixteen percent of the gamma axons coinnervated the dynamic and static intrafusal fibers. Some of these nonselective axons were branches of effernts that also gave rise to axons selective to either the dynamic or static types of intrafusal fibers in one or more spindles. Thus activation of individual stem gamma efferents might not have a purely dynamic or purely static effect on the integrated afferent outflow from spindles of a hindlimb muscles in the rat. In addition, primary afferents in all muscles had terminations that cross-innervated the dynamic bag1 and static bag1 and/or chain intrafusal fibers in individual spindles, an arrangement that may enhance the mixed dynamic/static behavior of afferents when different intrafusal fibers are activated concurrent. Spindles of the slow SOL and fast EDL muscles had similar features, whereas differences were observed in the organization of the proximal (SOL and EDL) and distal (LUM) muscles. Spindles in LUM muscles had fewer static intrafusal fibers, a higher ratio of dynamic to static gamma axons, and a higher incidence of skeletofusimotor (beta) innervation to intrafusal fibers than spindles in the SOL or EDL muscles. Thus, the relative contribution of dynamic and static systems to muscle afferent outflow may differ among spindles located in different segments of the rat hindlimb. However, the dynamic and static intrafusal systems of spindle were less sharply demarcated in each of the three hindlimb rat muscles than in the cat tenuissimus muscle.  相似文献   

17.
Ejaz A  Lange AB 《Peptides》2008,29(2):214-225
The dorsal vessel of the Vietnamese stick insect, Baculum extradentatum, consists of a tubular heart and an aorta that extends anteriorly into the head. Alary muscles, associated with the heart, are anchored to the body wall with attachments to the dorsal diaphragm. Alary muscle contraction draws haemolymph into the heart through incurrent ostia. Excurrent ostia lie on the dorsal vessel in the last thoracic and in each of the first two abdominal segments. Muscle fibers are associated with these excurrent ostia. Crustacean cardioactive peptide (CCAP)- and proctolin-like immunoreactivity is present in axons of the segmental nerves that project to the dorsal vessel, and in processes extending over the heart and alary muscles. Proctolin-like immunoreactive processes are also localized to the valves of the incurrent ostia and to the excurrent ostia. Neither the link nerve neurons, nor the lateral cardiac neurons, stain positively for these peptides. Physiological assays reveal dose-dependent increases in heart beat frequency in response to CCAP and proctolin. Isolating the dorsal vessel from the ventral nerve cord led to a change in the pattern of heart contractions, from a tonic, stable heart beat, to one which was phasic. The tonic nature was restored by the application of CCAP.  相似文献   

18.
Muscles exhibit highly complex, multi-scale architecture with thousands of muscle fibers, each with different properties, interacting with each other and surrounding connective structures. Consequently, the results of single-fiber experiments are scarcely linked to the macroscopic or whole muscle behavior. This is especially true for human muscles where it would be important to understand of how skeletal muscles disorders affect patients’ life. In this work, we developed a mathematical model to study how fast and slow muscle fibers, well characterized in single-fiber experiments, work and generate together force and displacement in muscle bundles. We characterized the parameters of a Hill-type model, using experimental data on fast and slow single human muscle fibers, and comparing experimental data with numerical simulations obtained from finite element (FE) models of single fibers. Then, we developed a FE model of a bundle of 19 fibers, based on an immunohistochemically stained cross section of human diaphragm and including the corresponding properties of each slow or fast fiber. Simulations of isotonic contractions of the bundle model allowed the generation of its apparent force–velocity relationship. Although close to the average of the force–velocity curves of fast and slow fibers, the bundle curve deviates substantially toward the fast fibers at low loads. We believe that the present model and the characterization of the force–velocity curve of a fiber bundle represents the starting point to link the single-fiber properties to those of whole muscle with FE application in phenomenological models of human muscles.  相似文献   

19.
In skeletal muscle, two major types of muscle fibers exist: slow-twitch oxidative (type I) fibers designed for low-intensity long-lasting contractions, and fast-twitch glycolytic (type II) fibers designed for high-intensity short-duration contractions. Such a wide range of capabilities has emerged through the selection across fiber types of a narrow set of molecular characteristics suitable to achieve a specific contractile phenotype. In this article we review evidence supporting the existence of distinct functional phenotypes in mitochondria from slow and fast fibers that may be required to ensure optimal muscle function. This includes differences with respect to energy substrate preferences, regulation of oxidative phosphorylation, dynamics of reactive oxygen species, handling of Ca2+, and regulation of cell death. The potential physiological implications on muscle function and the putative mechanisms responsible for establishing and maintaining distinct mitochondrial phenotype across fiber types are also discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Nerve terminal regions in walking leg opener muscles of several crayfish of different ages (0 to 245 days after hatching) were examined by means of electron microscopy. This muscle is innervated by two axons (excitatory and inhibitory) and at maturity contains three classes of synapse: excitatory and inhibitory neuromuscular synapses, and inhibitory axo-axonal synapses. The muscle itself is initially a syncytium, which gradually becomes subdivided into distinct “muscle fibers” as the animal matures. Innervation was not found in the opener muscle just before or just after hatching, but was present in restricted locations on the inner side of the muscle within a few days of hatching. As the muscle enlarged and became subdivided, innervation appeared in various other locations. Synaptic contacts were located in young stages soon after hatching, and in later stages. Morphological differences characteristic of excitatory and inhibitory nerve terminals could be found even at the earliest stages of innervation. Both excitatory and inhibitory synapses, but particularly the former, showed evidence of progressive enlargement to a final size within the first two months, and no evidence for further enlargement of existing synapses thereafter. Synaptic maturation also involved the appearance of presynaptic “dense bodies” thought to be regions at which transmitter substance is preferentially released. Nerve terminals at different levels of maturation were observed in opener muscles of young crayfish. Clear evidence for differential maturation of the three types of synapse present in this muscle was obtained. The inhibitory neuromuscular synapses attained their final average size and developed their dense bodies sooner than the excitatory neuromuscular synapses. The inhibitory axo-axonal synapses were the last to appear and to mature.  相似文献   

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