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1.
Persistent muscle weakness due to disuse-associated skeletal muscle atrophy limits the quality of life for patients with various diseases and individuals who are confined to bed. Fibers from disused muscle exhibit a marked reduction in active force production, which can exacerbate motor function, coupled with the well-known loss of muscle quantity. Despite recent understanding of the signaling pathways leading to the quantity loss, the molecular mechanisms of the depressed qualitative performance still remain elusive. Here we show that long-term disuse causes preferential loss of the giant sarcomere protein titin, associated with changes in physiologic muscle function. Ca(2+) sensitivity of active force decreased following 6 wk of hindlimb immobilization in the soleus muscle of the rat, accompanied by a shift in the length-active force relationship to the shorter length side. Our analyses revealed marked changes in the disused sarcomere, with shortening of thick and thin filaments responsible for altered length dependence and expansion of interfilament lattice spacing leading to a reduction in Ca(2+) sensitivity. These results provide a novel view that disuse-induced preferential titin loss results in altered muscle function via abnormal sarcomeric organization.  相似文献   

2.
The contribution of thick and thin filaments to skeletal muscle fiber compliance has been shown to be significant. If similar to the compliance of cycling cross-bridges, myofilament compliance could explain the difference in time course of stiffness and force during the rise of tension in a tetanus as well as the difference in Ca(2+) sensitivity of force and stiffness and more rapid phase 2 tension recovery (r) at low Ca(2+) activation. To characterize the contribution of myofilament compliance to sarcomere compliance and isometric force kinetics, the Ca(2+)-activation dependence of sarcomere compliance in single glycerinated rabbit psoas fibers, in the presence of ATP (5.0 mM), was measured using rapid length steps. At steady sarcomere length, the dependence of sarcomere compliance on the level of Ca(2+)-activated force was similar in form to that observed for fibers in rigor where force was varied by changing length. Additionally, the ratio of stiffness/force was elevated at lower force (low [Ca(2+)]) and r was faster, compared with maximum activation. A simple series mechanical model of myofilament and cross-bridge compliance in which only strong cross-bridge binding was activation dependent was used to describe the data. The model fit the data and predicted that the observed activation dependence of r can be explained if myofilament compliance contributes 60-70% of the total fiber compliance, with no requirement that actomyosin kinetics be [Ca(2+)] dependent or that cooperative interactions contribute to strong cross-bridge binding.  相似文献   

3.
The myosin lattice spacing of single intact muscle fibers of the frog, Rana temporaria, was studied in Ringer's solution (standard osmolarity 230 mOsm) and hyper- and hypotonic salines (1.4 and 0.8 times standard osmolarity respectively) in the relaxed state, during "fixed end" tetani, and during shortening, using synchrotron radiation. At standard tonicity, a tetanus was associated with an initial brief lattice expansion (and a small amount of sarcomere shortening), followed by a slow compression (unaccompanied by sarcomere length changes). In hypertonic saline (myosin lattice compressed by 8.1%), these spacing changes were suppressed, in hypotonic saline (lattice spacing increased by 7.5%), they were enhanced. During unloaded shortening of activated fibers, a rapid lattice expansion occurred at all tonicities, but became larger as tonicity was reduced. This expansion was caused in part by the change in length of the preparation, but also by a recoil of a stressed radial compliance associated with axial force. The lattice spacing during unloaded shortening was equal to or occasionally greater than predicted for a relaxed fiber at that sarcomere length, indicating that the lattice compression associated with activation is rapidly reversed upon loss of axial force. Lattice recompression occurred upon termination of shortening under standard and hypotonic conditions, but was almost absent under hypertonic conditions. These observations indicate that axial cross-bridge tension is associated with a compressive radial force in intact muscle fibers at full overlap; however, this radial force exhibits a much greater sensitivity to lattice spacing than does the axial force.  相似文献   

4.
A new optical-electronic method has been developed to detect striation spacing of single muscle fibers. The technique avoids Bragg-angle and interference-fringe effects associated with laser light diffraction by using polychromatic (white) light. The light is diffracted once by an acousto-optical device and then diffracted again by the muscle fiber. The double diffraction reverses the chromatic dispersion normally obtained with polychromatic light. In frog skinned muscle fibers, active and passive sarcomere shortening were smooth when observed by white light diffraction, whereas steps and pauses occurred in the striation spacing signals obtained with laser illumination. During active contractions skinned fibers shortened at high rates (3-5 microns/s per half sarcomere, 0-5 degrees C) at loads below 5% of isometric tension. Compression of the myofibrillar lateral filament spacing using osmotic agents reduced the shortening velocity at low loads. A hypothesis is presented that high shortening velocities are observed with skinned muscle fibers because the cross-bridges cannot support compressive loads when the filament lattice is swollen.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of differential expression of titin isoforms on sarcomere length (SL)-dependent changes in passive force, maximum Ca(2+)-activated force, apparent cooperativity in activation of force (n(H)), Ca(2+) sensitivity of force (pCa(50)), and rate of force redevelopment (k(tr)) were investigated in rat cardiac muscle. Skinned right ventricular trabeculae were isolated from wild-type (WT) and mutant homozygote (Ho) hearts expressing predominantly a smaller N2B isoform (2,970 kDa) and a giant N2BA-G isoform (3,830 kDa), respectively. Stretching WT and Ho trabeculae from SL 2.0 to 2.35 μm increased passive force, maximum Ca(2+)-activated force, and pCa(50), and it decreased n(H) and k(tr). Compared with WT trabeculae, the magnitude of SL-dependent changes in passive force, maximum Ca(2+)-activated force, pCa(50), and n(H) was significantly smaller in Ho trabeculae. These results suggests that, at least in rat ventricle, the magnitude of SL-dependent changes in passive force, maximum Ca(2+)-activated force, pCa(50), n(H), and k(tr) is defined by the titin isoform.  相似文献   

6.
The spatiotemporal distribution of intracellular Ca(2+) release in contracting skeletal and cardiac muscle cells was defined using a snapshot imaging technique. Calcium imaging was performed on intact skeletal and cardiac muscle cells during contractions induced by an action potential (AP). The sarcomere length of the skeletal and cardiac cells was approximately 2 micrometer. Imaging Rhod-2 fluorescence only during a very brief (7 ns) snapshot of excitation light minimized potential image-blurring artifacts due to movement and/or diffusion. In skeletal muscle cells, the AP triggered a large fast Ca(2+) transient that peaked in less than 3 ms. Distinct subsarcomeric Ca(2+) gradients were evident during the first 4 ms of the skeletal Ca(2+) transient. In cardiac muscle, the AP-triggered Ca(2+) transient was much slower and peaked in approximately 100 ms. In contrast to the skeletal case, there were no detectable subsarcomeric Ca(2+) gradients during the cardiac Ca(2+) transient. Theoretical simulations suggest that the subsarcomeric Ca(2+) gradients seen in skeletal muscle were detectable because of the high speed and synchrony of local Ca(2+) release. Slower asynchronous recruitment of local Ca(2+) release units may account for the absence of detectable subsarcomeric Ca(2+) gradients in cardiac muscle. The speed and synchrony of local Ca(2+) gradients are quite different in AP-activated contracting cardiac and skeletal muscle cells at normal resting sarcomere lengths.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
The maximal force and median frequency (MF) of the electromyogram (EMG) power density spectrum (PDS) have been compared in disused (6 weeks' immobilization) and control (contralateral) human adductor pollicis muscles during fatigue induced by voluntary or electrically-triggered (30 Hz) contractions. The results indicated that after 6 weeks' immobilization, MF was not significantly different in disused and control muscles although the force and integrated EMG were drastically reduced during a maximal voluntary contraction (MVC; by 55% and 45%, respectively, n = 8). During sustained 60 s MVC, the force decreased at the same rate in immobilized and control muscles, but the shift of MF towards lower frequency values was smaller (P less than 0.05) in disused muscle as compared to control by (14% vs 28%, respectively). In electrically-induced fatigue, the force decrease and the MF shift were larger after inactivity (41% and 43% in one subject, and 50% and 54% in the other subject, respectively) as compared to control (29% and 34% in one subject, and 37% and 38% in the other subject, respectively). These results emphasize the caution that should be exercised when EMG signals are quantified by computing the power density spectrum. The different effects of fatigue during voluntary and electrically-imposed contractions in disused and control muscles indicated that immobilization induced changes in the neural command for the contraction which compensated, at least in part, for its decreased contractile efficiency and resistance to fatigue.  相似文献   

9.
Using the patch-clamp technique, we demonstrate that, in depolarized cell-attached patches from mouse skeletal muscle fibers, a short hyperpolarization to resting value is followed by a transient activation of Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channels (K(Ca)) upon return to depolarized levels. These results indicate that sparse sites of passive Ca(2+) influx at resting potentials are responsible for a subsarcolemmal Ca(2+) load high enough to induce K(Ca) channel activation upon muscle activation. We then investigate this phenomenon in mdx dystrophin-deficient muscle fibers, in which an elevated Ca(2+) influx and a subsequent subsarcolemmal Ca(2+) overload are suspected. The number of Ca(2+) entry sites detected with K(Ca) was found to be greater in mdx muscle. K(Ca) activity reflecting subsarcolemmal Ca(2+) load was also found to be independent of the activity of leak channels carrying inward currents at negative potentials in mdx muscle. These results indicate that the sites of passive Ca(2+) influx newly described in this study could represent the Ca(2+) influx pathways responsible for the subsarcolemmal Ca(2+) overload in mdx muscle fibers.  相似文献   

10.
The demembranated (skinned) muscle fiber preparation is widely used to investigate muscle contraction because the intracellular ionic conditions can be precisely controlled. However, plasma membrane removal results in a loss of osmotic regulation, causing abnormal hydration of the myofilament lattice and its proteins. We investigated the structural and functional consequences of varied myofilament lattice spacing and protein hydration on cross-bridge rates of force development and detachment in Drosophila melanogaster indirect flight muscle, using x-ray diffraction to compare the lattice spacing of dissected, osmotically compressed skinned fibers to native muscle fibers in living flies. Osmolytes of different sizes and exclusion properties (Dextran T-500 and T-10) were used to differentially alter lattice spacing and protein hydration. At in vivo lattice spacing, cross-bridge attachment time (ton) increased with higher osmotic pressures, consistent with a reduced cross-bridge detachment rate as myofilament protein hydration decreased. In contrast, in the swollen lattice, ton decreased with higher osmotic pressures. These divergent responses were reconciled using a structural model that predicts ton varies inversely with thick-to-thin filament surface distance, suggesting that cross-bridge rates of force development and detachment are modulated more by myofilament lattice geometry than protein hydration. Generalizing these findings, our results suggest that cross-bridge cycling rates slow as thick-to-thin filament surface distance decreases with sarcomere lengthening, and likewise, cross-bridge cycling rates increase during sarcomere shortening. Together, these structural changes may provide a mechanism for altering cross-bridge performance throughout a contraction-relaxation cycle.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of eugenol on the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) and contractile apparatus of chemically skinned skeletal muscle fibers of the frog Rana catesbeiana were investigated. In saponin-skinned fibers, eugenol (5 mmol/L) induced muscle contractions, probably by releasing Ca(2+) from the SR. The Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+) release blocker ruthenium red (10 micromol/L) inhibited both caffeine- and eugenol-induced muscle contractions. Ryanodine (200 micromol/L), a specific ryanodine receptor/Ca(2+) release channel blocker, promoted complete inhibition of the contractions induced by caffeine, but only partially blocked the contractions induced by eugenol. Heparin (2.5 mg/mL), an inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP3) receptor blocker, strongly inhibited the contractions induced by eugenol but had only a small effect on the caffeine-induced contractions. Eugenol neither altered the Ca(2+) sensitivity nor the maximal force in Triton X-100 skinned muscle fibers. These data suggest that muscle contraction induced by eugenol involves at least 2 mechanisms of Ca(2+) release from the SR: one related to the activation of the ryanodine receptors and another through a heparin-sensitive pathway.  相似文献   

12.
In Triton-skinned phasic ileal smooth muscle, constitutively active recombinant p21-activated kinase (PAK3) has been shown to induce Ca(2+)-independent contraction, which is accompanied by phosphorylation of caldesmon and desmin (Van Eyk JE, Arrell DK, Foster DB, Strauss JD, Heinonen TY, Furmaniak-Kazmierczak E, Cote GP, and Mak AS. J Biol Chem 273: 23433-23439, 1998). In the present study, we investigated whether PAK has a broad impact on smooth muscle in general by testing the hypothesis that PAK induces Ca(2+)-independent contractions and/or Ca(2+) sensitization in tonic airway smooth muscle and that the process is mediated via phosphorylation of caldesmon. In the absence of Ca(2+) (pCa > 9), constitutively active glutathione-S-transferase-murine PAK3 (GST-mPAK3) caused force generation of Triton-skinned canine tracheal smooth muscle (TSM) fibers to approximately 40% of the maximal force generated by Ca(2+) at pCa 4.4. In addition, GST-mPAK3 enhanced Ca(2+) sensitivity of contraction by increasing force generation by 80% at intermediate Ca(2+) concentrations (pCa 6.2), whereas it had no effect at pCa 4.4. Catalytically inactive GST-mPAK3(K297R) had no effect on force production. Using antibody against one of the PAK-phosphorylated sites (Ser(657)) on caldesmon, we showed that a basal level of phosphorylation of caldesmon occurs at this site in skinned TSM and that PAK-induced contraction was accompanied by a significant increase in the level of phosphorylation. Western blot analyses show that PAK1 is the predominant PAK isoform expressed in murine, rat, canine, and porcine TSM. We conclude that PAK causes Ca(2+)-independent contractions and produces Ca(2+) sensitization of skinned phasic and tonic smooth muscle, which involves an incremental increase in caldesmon phosphorylation.  相似文献   

13.
The functional correlates of fatigue observed in both animals and humans during exercise include a decline in peak force (P0), maximal velocity, and peak power. Establishing the extent to which these deleterious functional changes result from direct effects on the myofilaments is facilitated through understanding the molecular mechanisms of the cross-bridge cycle. With actin-myosin binding, the cross-bridge transitions from a weakly bound low-force state to a strongly bound high-force state. Low pH reduces the number of high-force cross bridges in fast fibers, and the force per cross bridge in both fast and slow fibers. The former is thought to involve a direct inhibition of the forward rate constant for transition to the strong cross-bridge state. In contrast, inorganic phosphate (Pi) is thought to reduce P0 by accelerating the reversal of this step. Both H+ and Pi decrease myofibrillar Ca2+ sensitivity. This effect is particularly important as the amplitude of the Ca2+ transient falls with fatigue. The inhibitory effects of low pH and high Pi on P0 are reduced as temperature increases from 10 to 30 degrees C. However, the H+-induced depression of peak power in the slow fiber type, and Pi inhibition of myofibrillar Ca2+ sensitivity in slow and fast fibers, are greater at high compared with low temperature. Thus the depressive effects of H+ and Pi at in vivo temperatures cannot easily be predicted from data collected below 25 degrees C. In vitro, reactive oxygen species reduce myofibrillar Ca2+ sensitivity; however, the importance of this mechanism during in vivo exercise is unknown.  相似文献   

14.
The steep relationship between systolic force production and end diastolic volume (Frank-Starling relationship) in myocardium is a potentially important mechanism by which the work capacity of the heart varies on a beat-to-beat basis, but the molecular basis for the effects of myocardial fiber length on cardiac work are still not well understood. Recent studies have suggested that an intrinsic property of myocardium, stretch activation, contributes to force generation during systolic ejection in myocardium. To examine the role of stretch activation in length dependence of activation we recorded the force responses of murine skinned myocardium to sudden stretches of 1% of muscle length at both short (1.90 microm) and long (2.25 microm) sarcomere lengths (SL). Maximal Ca(2+)-activated force and Ca(2+) sensitivity of force were greater at longer SL, such that more force was produced at a given Ca(2+) concentration. Sudden stretch of myocardium during an otherwise isometric contraction resulted in a concomitant increase in force that quickly decayed to a minimum and was followed by a delayed development of force, i.e., stretch activation, to levels greater than prestretch force. At both maximal and submaximal activations, increased SL significantly reduced the initial rate of force decay following stretch; at submaximal activations (but not at maximal) the rate of delayed force development was accelerated. This combination of mechanical effects of increased SL would be expected to increase force generation during systolic ejection in vivo and prolong the period of ejection. These results suggest that sarcomere length dependence of stretch activation contributes to the steepness of the Frank-Starling relationship in living myocardium.  相似文献   

15.
Myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity and maximal Ca2+-activated force are fundamental properties of the contractile proteins in the heart. Although these properties can be evaluated directly in skinned preparations, they have remained elusive in intact tissue. A novel approach is described that allows maximal Ca2+-activated force to be measured and myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity to be deduced from isovolumic pressure in intact perfused ferret hearts. Phosphorus nuclear magnetic resonance spectra are obtained sequentially to measure the intracellular inorganic phosphate (Pi) and hydrogen ion (H+) concentrations. After a period of perfusion with oxygenated, HEPES-buffered Tyrode solution, hypoxia is induced as a means of elevating [Pi]. The decline in twitch pressure can then be related to the measured increase in [Pi]. After recovery, hearts are perfused with ryanodine to enable tetanization and the measurement of maximal Ca2+-activated pressure. Hypoxia is induced once again, and maximal pressure is correlated with [Pi]. We then compare the relations between [Pi] and maximal pressure on the one hand, and [Pi] and twitch pressure on the other. If the two relations differ only by a constant scaling factor, then the decline in twitch pressure can be attributed solely to a decline in maximal pressure, with no change in myofilament sensitivity. We obtained such a result during hypoxia, which indicated that Pi accumulation decreases maximal force but does not change myofilament sensitivity. We compared these results with acidosis (induced by bubbling with 5% CO2). In contrast with Pi, the accumulation of H+ decreases twitch force primarily by shifting myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity. This approach in intact tissue has strengths and limitations complementary to those of skinned muscle experiments.  相似文献   

16.
The process of phosphate dissociation during the muscle cross-bridge cycle has been investigated by photoliberation of inorganic phosphate (Pi) within skinned fibers of rabbit psoas muscle. This permitted a test of the idea that Ca2+ controls muscle contraction by regulating the Pi release step of the cycle. Photoliberation of Pi from structurally distinct "caged" Pi precursors initiated a rapid tension decline of up to 12% of active tension, and this was followed by a slower tension decline. The apparent rate constant of the fast phase, kPi, depended on both [Pi] and [Ca2+], whereas the slow phase generally occurred at 2-4 s-1. At maximal Ca2+, kPi increased in a nonlinear manner from 43 +/- 2 s-1 to 118 +/- 7 s-1, as Pi was raised from 0.9 to 12 mM. This was analyzed in terms of a three-state kinetic model in which a force-generating transition is coupled to Pi dissociation from the cross-bridge. As Ca(2+)-activated tension was reduced from maximal (Pmax) to 0.1 Pmax, (i) kPi decreased by up to 2.5-fold, (ii) the relative amplitude of the rapid phase increased 2-fold, and (iii) the relative amplitude of the slow phase increased about 6-fold. Changes in the rapid phase are compatible with Ca2+ influencing an apparent equilibrium constant for the force-generating transition. By comparison, kPi was faster than the rate constant of tension redevelopment, ktr, and was influenced less by Ca2+. Ca2+ effects on the caged Pi transient cannot account for the large effects of Ca2+ on actomyosin ATPase rates or cross-bridge cycling kinetics but may be a manifestation of reciprocal interactions between the thin filament and force-generating cross-bridges, and may represent Ca2+ regulation of the distribution of cross-bridges between non-force-and force-generating states.  相似文献   

17.
E Homsher  J Lacktis    M Regnier 《Biophysical journal》1997,72(4):1780-1791
When inorganic phosphate (Pi) is photogenerated from caged Pi during isometric contractions of glycerinated rabbit psoas muscle fibers, the released Pi binds to cross-bridges and reverses the working stroke of cross-bridges. The consequent force decline, the Pi-transient, is exponential and probes the kinetics of the power-stroke and Pi release. During muscle shortening, the fraction of attached cross-bridges and the average strain on them decreases (Ford, L. E., A.F. Huxley, and R.M. Simmons, 1977. Tension responses to sudden length change in stimulated frog muscle fibers near slack length. J. Physiol. (Lond.). 269:441-515; Ford, L. E., A. F. Huxley, and R.M. Simmons, 1985. Tension transients during steady state shortening of frog muscle fibers. J. Physiol. (Lond.). 361:131-150. To learn to what extent the Pi transient is strain dependent, muscle fibers were activated and shortened or lengthened at a fixed velocity during the photogeneration of Pi. The Pi transients observed during changes in muscle length showed three primary characteristics: 1) during shortening the Pi transient rate, Kpi, increased and its amplitude decreased with shortening velocity; Kpi increased linearly with velocity to > 110 s-1 at 0.3 muscle lengths per second (ML/s). 2) At a specific shortening velocity, increases in [Pi] produce increases in Kpi that are nonlinear with [Pi] and approach an asymptote. 3) During forced lengthening Kpi and the amplitude of the Pi transient are little different from the isometric contractions. These data can be approximated by a strain-dependent three-state cross-bridge model. The results show that the power stroke's rate is strain-dependent, and are consistent with biochemical studies indicating that the rate-limiting step at low strains is a transition from a weakly to a strongly bound cross-bridge state.  相似文献   

18.
The role of Ca(2+) mobilization from intracellular stores and Ca(2+)-activated Cl(-) channels in caffeine- and histamine-induced depolarization and contraction of the rabbit middle cerebral artery has been studied by recording membrane potential and isometric force. Caffeine induced a transient contraction and a transient followed by sustained depolarization. The transient depolarization was abolished by ryanodine, DIDS, and niflumic acid, suggesting involvement of Ca(2+)-activated Cl(-) channels. Histamine-evoked transient contraction in Ca(2+)-free solution was abolished by ryanodine or by caffeine-induced depletion of Ca(2+) stores. Ryanodine slowed the development of depolarization induced by histamine in Ca(2+)-containing solution but did not affect its magnitude. In arteries treated with 1 mM Co(2+), histamine elicited a transient depolarization and contraction, which was abolished by ryanodine. DIDS and niflumic acid reduced histamine-evoked depolarization and contraction. Histamine caused a sustained depolarization and contraction in low-Cl(-) solution. These results suggest that Ca(2+) mobilization from ryanodine-sensitive stores is involved in histamine-induced initial, but not sustained, depolarization and contraction. Ca(2+)-activated Cl(-) channels contribute mainly to histamine-induced initial depolarization and less importantly to sustained depolarization, which is most likely dependent on activation of nonselective cation channels.  相似文献   

19.
The aim of this study was to assess the relationships between human muscle fiber hypertrophy, protein isoform content, and maximal Ca(2+)-activated contractile function following a short-term period of resistance exercise training. Six male subjects (age 27 +/- 2 yr) participated in a 12-wk progressive resistance exercise training program that increased voluntary lower limb extension strength by >60%. Single chemically skinned fibers were prepared from pre- and posttraining vastus lateralis muscle biopsies. Training increased the cross-sectional area (CSA) and peak Ca(2+)-activated force (P(o)) of fibers containing type I, IIa, or IIa/IIx myosin heavy chain by 30-40% without affecting fiber-specific force (P(o)/CSA) or unloaded shortening velocity (V(o)). Absolute fiber peak power rose as a result of the increase in P(o), whereas power normalized to fiber volume was unchanged. At the level of the cross bridge, the effects of short-term resistance training were quantitative (fiber hypertrophy and proportional increases in fiber P(o) and absolute power) rather than qualitative (no change in P(o)/CSA, V(o), or power/fiber volume).  相似文献   

20.
Force decline during fatigue in skeletal muscle is attributed mainly to progressive alterations of the intracellular milieu. Metabolite changes and the decline in free myoplasmic calcium influence the activation and contractile processes. This study was aimed at evaluating whether fatigue also causes persistent modifications of key myofibrillar and sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) proteins that contribute to tension reduction. The presence of such modifications was investigated in chemically skinned fibers, a procedure that replaces the fatigued cytoplasm from the muscle fiber with a normal medium. Myofibrillar Ca(2+) sensitivity was reduced in slow-twitch muscle (for example, the pCa value corresponding to 50% of maximum tension was 6.23 +/- 0.03 vs. 5.99 + 0.05, P < 0.01, in rested and fatigued fibers) and not modified in fast-twitch muscle. Phosphorylation of the regulatory myosin light chain isoform increased in fast-twitch muscle. The rate of SR Ca(2+) uptake was increased in slow-twitch muscle fibers (14.2 +/- 1.0 vs. 19.6 +/- 2. 5 nmol. min(-1). mg fiber protein(-1), P < 0.05) and not altered in fast-twitch fibers. No persistent modifications of SR Ca(2+) release properties were found. These results indicate that persistent modifications of myofibrillar and SR properties contribute to fatigue-induced muscle force decline only in slow fibers. These alterations may be either enhanced or counteracted, in vivo, by the metabolic changes that normally occur during fatigue development.  相似文献   

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