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1.
Titin is a structural protein in muscle that spans the half sarcomere from Z-band to M-line. Although there are selected studies on titin's mechanical properties from tests on isolated molecules or titin fragments, little is known about its behavior within the structural confines of a sarcomere. Here, we tested the hypothesis that titin properties might be reflected well in single myofibrils. Single myofibrils from rabbit psoas were prepared for measurement of passive stretch-shortening cycles at lengths where passive titin forces occur. Three repeat stretch-shortening cycles with magnitudes between 1.0 and 3.0μm/sarcomere were performed at a speed of 0.1μm/s·sarcomere and repeated after a ten minute rest at zero force. These tests were performed in a relaxation solution (passive) and an activation solution (active) where cross-bridge attachment was inhibited with 2,3 butanedionemonoxime. Myofibrils behaved viscoelastically producing an increased efficiency with repeat stretch-shortening cycles, but a decreased efficiency with increasing stretch magnitudes. Furthermore, we observed a first distinct inflection point in the force-elongation curve at an average sarcomere length of 3.5μm that was associated with an average force of 68±5nN/mm. This inflection point was thought to reflect the onset of Ig domain unfolding and was missing after a ten minute rest at zero force, suggesting a lack of spontaneous Ig domain refolding. These passive myofibrillar properties observed here are consistent with those observed in isolated titin molecules, suggesting that the mechanics of titin are well preserved in isolated myofibrils, and thus, can be studied readily in myofibrils, rather than in the extremely difficult and labile single titin preparations.  相似文献   

2.
There is a history dependence of skeletal muscle contraction: stretching activated muscles induces a long-lasting force enhancement, while shortening activated muscles induces a long-lasting force depression. These history-dependent properties cannot be explained by the current model of muscle contraction, and its mechanism is unknown. The purposes of this study were (i) to evaluate if force enhancement and force depression are present at short lengths (the ascending limb of the force–length (FL) relationship), (ii) to evaluate if the history-dependent properties are associated with sarcomere length (SL) non-uniformity and (iii) to determine the effects of cross-bridge (de)activation on force depression. Rabbit psoas myofibrils were isolated and attached between two microneedles for force measurements. Images of the myofibrils were projected onto a linear photodiode array for measurements of SL. Myofibrils were activated by either Ca2+ or MgADP; the latter induces cross-bridge attachment to actin independently of Ca2+. Activated myofibrils were subjected to three stretches or shortenings (approx. 4% SL at approx. 0.07 µm s−1 sarcomere−1) along the ascending limb of the FL relationship separated by periods (approx. 5 s) of isometric contraction. Force after stretch was higher than force after shortening at similar SLs. The differences in force could not be explained by SL non-uniformity. The FL relationship produced by Ca2+- and MgADP-activated myofibrils were similar in stretch experiments, but after shortening MgADP activation produced forces that were higher than Ca2+ activation. Since MgADP induces the formation of strongly bound cross-bridges, this result suggests that force depression following shortening is associated with cross-bridge deactivation.  相似文献   

3.
We studied the ATPase of shortening myofibrils at 4 degrees C by the rapid flow quench method. The progress curve has three phases: a P(i) burst, a fast linear phase kF of duration tB, and a deceleration to a slow kS. We propose that kF is the ATPase of myofibrils shortening under zero external load; at tB shortening and ATPase rates are reduced by passive resistance. The total ATP consumed during the rapid shortening is ATPc. Our purpose was to obtain information on the myofibrillar shortening velocity from their ATPase progress curves. We tested tB as an indicator of shortening velocity by determining the effects of different probes upon it and the other ATPase parameters. The dependence of tB upon the initial sarcomere length was linear, giving a shortening velocity close to that of muscle fibres (Vo). The Km of ATP was larger for tB than for kF, as found with fibers for Vo and their ATPase. ADP and 2,3-butanedione monoxime, but not P(i), inhibited tB to the same extent as Vo. The delta H for tB and Vo were similar. ATPc was independent of the sarcomere length, implying that the more the myofibrils shorten, the less ATP expended per myosin head per micron shortened. We propose that tB can be used as an indicator for myofibrillar shortening velocities.  相似文献   

4.
Graded Activation in Frog Muscle Fibers   总被引:5,自引:3,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The membrane potential of frog single muscle fibers in solutions containing tetrodotoxin was controlled with a two-electrode voltage clamp. Local contractions elicited by 100-ms square steps of depolarization were observed microscopically and recorded on cinefilm. The absence of myofibrillar folding with shortening to striation spacings below 1.95 µm served as a criterion for activation of the entire fiber cross section. With depolarizing steps of increasing magnitude, shortening occurred first in the most superficial myofibrils and spread inward to involve axial myofibrils as the depolarization was increased. In contractions in which the entire fiber cross section shortened actively, both the extent of shortening and the velocity of shortening at a given striation spacing could be graded by varying the magnitude of the depolarization step. The results provide evidence that the degree of activation of individual myofibrils can be graded with membrane depolarization.  相似文献   

5.
Myofibrillar creatine kinase and cardiac contraction   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
This article is a review on the organization and function of myofibrillar creatine kinase in striated muscle. The first part describes myofibrillar creatine kinase as an integral structural part of the complex organization of myofibrils in striated muscle. The second part considers the intrinsic biochemical and mechanical properties of myofibrils and the functional coupling between myofibrillar CK and myosin ATPase. Skinned fiber studies have been developed to evidence this functional coupling and the consequences for cardiac contraction. The data show that creatine kinase in myofibrils is effective enough to sustain normal tension and relaxation, normal Ca sensitivity and kinetic characteristics. Moreover, the results suggest that myofibrillar creatine kinase is essential in maintaining adequate ATP/ADP ratio in the vicinity of myosin ATPase active site to prevent dysfunctioning of this enzyme. Implications for the physiology and physiopathology of cardiac muscle are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
The steady-state force following active muscle shortening or stretch differs from the maximum isometric force associated with the final length. This phenomenon proves that the isometric force production is not only dependent on current muscle length and length time derivative, but depends on the preceding contraction history. Isolated extensor digitorum longus and soleus muscles from mice (NMRI strain) were used to investigate the force produced by a muscle, and some parameters hypothetically influencing this history-dependent force modification. The muscles were pre-stimulated at a fixed length, then different stretch/shortening episodes were introduced, whereafter changes of the active force were recorded while the muscles were held isometrically to approach a steady-state force before de-stimulation. The mechanical work during active stretch and shortening was evaluated by integrating the product of force and ramp velocity over the length-varying period. The results show a negative linear correlation between the force modification and the mechanical work produced on or by the muscle, continuous between shortening and stretch. A corresponding modification of the passive force component following each stimulation was also observed. The conclusion is that the isometric force attained after stretch or shortening is well described by an asymptotic force which is determined by the mechanical work.  相似文献   

7.
C Lionne  R Stehle  F Travers  T Barman 《Biochemistry》1999,38(26):8512-8520
We have exploited cryoenzymology, first, to probe the product release steps of myofibrillar ATPase under relaxing conditions and, second, to define the conditions for studying the contractile process in slow motion. Cryoenzymology implies perturbation by temperature and by the antifreeze added to allow for work at subzero temperatures. Here, we studied myofibrillar shortening and ATPases by the rapid quench flow method over a wide temperature range (-15 to 30 degrees C) in two antifreezes, 40% ethylene glycol and 20% methanol. The choice of solvent and temperature was dictated by the purpose of the experiment. Ethylene glycol (40%) is suitable for investigating the kinetics of the products release steps which is difficult in water. In this cryosolvent, the myofibrillar ATPase is not activated by Ca2+ nor is there shortening, except under special conditions, i.e., Ca2+ plus strong rigor bridges [Stehle, R., Lionne, C., Travers, F., and Barman, T. (1998) J. Muscl. Res. Cell Motil. 19, 381-392]. By the use of the glycol, we show that at low Ca2+ the kinetics of the ADP release are much faster with myofibrils than with S1. On the other hand, the kinetics of the Pi release were very similar for the two materials. Therefore, we suggest that, upon Ca2+ activation, only the Pi release kinetics are accelerated. In 20% methanol, in the presence of Ca2+, myofibrils shortened at temperatures above -2 degrees C but not below. At a given temperature above -2 degrees C, both the shortening and ATPase rates were reduced by the methanol. The temperature dependences of the myofibrillar ATPases (+/-Ca2+) converged with a decrease in temperature: at 20 degrees C, Ca2+ activated 30-fold, but at -15 degrees C, only about 5-fold. We suggest that studies in methanol may open the way for an investigation of muscle contraction in slow motion and, further, to obtain thermodynamic information on the internal forces involved in the shortening process.  相似文献   

8.
The in vitro mechanical properties of smooth muscle strips from 10 human main stem bronchi obtained immediately after pneumonectomy were evaluated. Maximal active isometric and isotonic responses were obtained at varying lengths by use of electrical field stimulation (EFS). At the length (Lmax) producing maximal force (Pmax), resting tension was very high (60.0 +/- 8.8% Pmax). Maximal fractional muscle shortening was 25.0 +/- 9.0% at a length of 75% Lmax, whereas less shortening occurred at Lmax (12.2 +/- 2.7%). The addition of increasing elastic loads produced an exponential decrease in the shortening and velocity of shortening but increased tension generation of muscle strips stimulated by EFS. Morphometric analysis revealed that muscle accounted for 8.7 +/- 1.5% of the total cross-sectional tissue area. Evaluation of two human tracheal smooth muscle preparations revealed mechanics similar to the bronchial preparations. Passive tension at Lmax was 10-fold greater and maximal active shortening was threefold less than that previously demonstrated for porcine trachealis by us of the same apparatus. We attribute the limited shortening of human bronchial and tracheal smooth muscle to the larger load presumably provided by a connective tissue parallel elastic component within the evaluated tissues, which must be overcome for shortening to occur. We suggest that a decrease in airway wall elastance could increase smooth muscle shortening, leading to excessive responses to contractile agonists, as seen in airway hyperresponsiveness.  相似文献   

9.
Mechanical properties of skeletal muscles are often studied for controlled, electrically induced, maximal, or supra-maximal contractions. However, many mechanical properties, such as the force-length relationship and force enhancement following active muscle stretching, are quite different for maximal and sub-maximal, or electrically induced and voluntary contractions. Force depression, the loss of force observed following active muscle shortening, has been observed and is well documented for electrically induced and maximal voluntary contractions. Since sub-maximal voluntary contractions are arguably the most important for everyday movement analysis and for biomechanical models of skeletal muscle function, it is important to study force depression properties under these conditions. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine force depression following sub-maximal, voluntary contractions. Sets of isometric reference and isometric-shortening-isometric test contractions at 30% of maximal voluntary effort were performed with the adductor pollicis muscle. All reference and test contractions were executed by controlling force or activation using a feedback system. Test contractions included adductor pollicis shortening over 10 degrees, 20 degrees, and 30 degrees of thumb adduction. Force depression was assessed by comparing the steady-state isometric forces (activation control) or average electromyograms (EMGs) (force control) following active muscle shortening with those obtained in the corresponding isometric reference contractions. Force was decreased by 20% and average EMG was increased by 18% in the shortening test contractions compared to the isometric reference contractions. Furthermore, force depression was increased with increasing shortening amplitudes, and the relative magnitudes of force depression were similar to those found in electrically stimulated and maximal contractions. We conclude from these results that force depression occurs in sub-maximal voluntary contractions, and that force depression may play a role in the mechanics of everyday movements, and therefore may have to be considered in biomechanical models of human movement.  相似文献   

10.
Barnacle single muscle fibers were microinjected with the calcium-specific photoprotein aequorin. We have previously shown (Ridgway, E. B., and A. M. Gordon, 1984, Journal of General Physiology, 83:75-104) that when barnacle fibers are stimulated under voltage clamp and length control and allowed to shorten during the declining phase of the calcium transient, extra myoplasmic calcium is observed. The time course of the extra calcium for shortening steps at different times during the calcium transient is intermediate between those of free calcium and muscle force. Furthermore, the amplitude increases with an increased stimulus, calcium transient, and force. Therefore, the extra calcium probably comes from the activating sites on the myofilaments, possibly as a result of changes in calcium binding by the activating sites. The change in calcium binding may be due, in turn, to the change in muscle length and/or muscle force and/or cross-bridge attachment per se. In the present article, we show that the amount of the extra calcium depends on the initial muscle length, declining at shorter lengths. This suggests length-dependent calcium binding. The relation between initial length and extra calcium, however, parallels that between initial length and peak active force. The ratio of extra calcium to active force is therefore virtually independent of initial length. These data do not distinguish between a direct effect of length on calcium binding and an indirect effect owing to changes in cross-bridge attachment and force through some geometrical factor. The amount of extra calcium increases with the size of the shortening step, tending toward saturation for steps of greater than or equal to 10%. This experiment suggests that calcium binding depends on muscle force or cross-bridge attachment, not just length (if at all). There is much less extra calcium seen with shortening steps at high force when the high force results from stretch of the active muscle than when it results from increased stimulation of muscle.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Lionne C  Iorga B  Candau R  Piroddi N  Webb MR  Belus A  Travers F  Barman T 《Biochemistry》2002,41(44):13297-13308
It has been suggested that the mechanical condition determines the rate-limiting step of the ATPase of the myosin heads in fibers: when fibers are isometrically contracting, the ADP release kinetics are rate-limiting, but as the strain is reduced and the fibers are allowed to shorten, the ADP release kinetics accelerate and P(i) release becomes rate-limiting. We have put this idea to the test with myofibrils as a model because with these both mechanical and chemical kinetic measurements are possible. With relaxed or rapidly shortening myofibrils, P(i) release is rate-limiting and (A)M.ADP.P(i) states accumulate in the steady state [Lionne, C., et al. (1995) FEBS Lett. 364, 59]. We have now studied the kinetics of P(i) release with chemically cross-linked myofibrils that, when adequately cross-linked, appear to be a good model for isometric contraction. By using a method that is specific for free P(i) and rapid quench flow that measures the amount of (A)M.ADP.P(i) states and free P(i), we show that (A)M.ADP.P(i) states predominate which suggests that the overall ATPase is limited by P(i) release kinetics. Therefore, under our experimental conditions with myofibrils prevented from shortening, the concentration of (A)M.ADP states is low, as with rapidly shortening and relaxed myofibrils. This result is difficult to reconcile with the sensitivity of force development in fibers and myofibrils to P(i) which implies interaction of P(i) with an (A)M.ADP state. We discuss two models for accommodating the mechanical and chemical kinetics with reference to the duty cycle in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

12.
Length adaptation of the airway smooth muscle cell is attributable to cytoskeletal remodeling. It has been proposed that dysregulated actin filaments may become longer in asthma, and that such elongation would prevent a parallel-to-series transition of contractile units, thus precluding the well-known beneficial effects of deep inspirations and tidal breathing. To test the potential effect that actin filament elongation could have in overall muscle mechanics, we present an extremely simple model. The cytoskeleton is represented as a 2-D network of links (contractile filaments) connecting nodes (adhesion plaques). Such a network evolves in discrete time steps by forming and dissolving links in a stochastic fashion. Links are formed by idealized contractile units whose properties are either those from normal or elongated actin filaments. Oscillations were then imposed on the network to evaluate both the effects of breathing and length adaptation. In response to length oscillation, a network with longer actin filaments showed smaller decreases of force, smaller increases in compliance, and higher shortening velocities. Taken together, these changes correspond to a network that is refractory to the effects of breathing and therefore approximates an asthmatic scenario. Thus, an extremely simple model seems to capture some relatively complex mechanics of airway smooth muscle, supporting the idea that dysregulation of actin filament length may contribute to excessive airway narrowing.  相似文献   

13.
To study the dynamics of individual half-sarcomeres in striated muscle contraction, myofibrils prepared from rabbit psoas muscle and left ventricles of guinea pig were immunostained with two conjugated antibody complexes consisting of a primary antibody against either alpha-actinin or myomesin and a secondary fluorescently labeled Fab-fragment. We simultaneously measured force kinetics and determined the positions of the Z-line and M-band signals by fluorescence video microscopy and sophisticated computer vision (tracking) algorithms. Upon calcium activation, sarcomeres and half-sarcomeres shortened nonuniformly. Shortening occurred first rapidly and exponentially during the force rise and then slowly during the force plateau. In psoas myofibrils, time-resolved displacements of the A-band in sarcomeres were observed, i.e., the two halves of individual sarcomeres behaved nonuniformly. Nonuniformity in length changes between the two halves of sarcomeres was comparable to that between two adjacent half-sarcomeres of neighboring sarcomeres. Sequential lengthening of half-sarcomeres was observed in cardiac myofibrils during the rapid phase of force relaxation. The independent dynamics of the halves in a sarcomere reveals the half-sarcomere as the functional unit rather than the structural unit, the sarcomere. The technique will facilitate the study of filament sliding within individual half-sarcomeres and the mechanics of intersegmental chemomechanical coupling in multisegmental striated muscles.  相似文献   

14.
Contraction of smooth muscle tissue involves interactions between active and passive structures within the cells and in the extracellular matrix. This study focused on a defined mechanical behavior (shortening-dependent stiffness) of canine tracheal smooth muscle tissues to evaluate active and passive contributions to tissue behavior. Two approaches were used. In one, mechanical measurements were made over a range of temperatures to identify those functions whose temperature sensitivity (Q(10)) identified them as either active or passive. Isotonic shortening velocity and rate of isometric force development had high Q(10) values (2.54 and 2.13, respectively); isometric stiffness showed Q(10) values near unity. The shape of the curve relating stiffness to isotonic shortening lengths was unchanged by temperature. In the other approach, muscle contractility was reduced by applying a sudden shortening step during the rise of isometric tension. Control contractions began with the muscle at the stepped length so that properties were measured over comparable length ranges. Under isometric conditions, redeveloped isometric force was reduced, but the ratio between force and stiffness did not change. Under isotonic conditions beginning during force redevelopment at the stepped length, initial shortening velocity and the extent of shortening were reduced, whereas the rate of relaxation was increased. The shape of the curve relating stiffness to isotonic shortening lengths was unchanged, despite the step-induced changes in muscle contractility. Both sets of findings were analyzed in the context of a quasi-structural model describing the shortening-dependent stiffness of lightly loaded tracheal muscle strips.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of 2,3-butanedione 2-monoxime (BDM) on mechanical responses of glycerinated fibers and the ATPase activity of heavy meromyosin (HMM) and myofibrils have been studied using rabbit skeletal muscle. The mechanical responses and the ATPase activity were measured in similar conditions (ionic strength 0.06-0.2 M, 0.4-4 mM MgATP, 0-20 mM BDM, 2-20 degrees C and pH 7.0). BDM reversibly reduced the isometric tension, shortening speed, and instantaneous stiffness of the fibers. BDM also inhibited myofibrillar and HMM ATPase activities. The inhibitory effect on the relative ATPase activity of HMM was not influenced by the addition of actin or troponin-tropomyosin-actin. High temperature and low ionic strength weakened BDM's suppression of contraction of the fibers and the ATPase activity of contracting myofibrils, but not of the HMM, acto-HMM and relaxed myofibrillar ATPase activity. The size of the initial phosphate burst at 20 degrees C was independent of the concentration of BDM. These results suggest that the suppression of contraction of muscle fibers is due mainly to direct action of BDM on the myosin molecules.  相似文献   

16.
Estimates of force generation or shortening obtained from smooth muscle tissues are valid for individual cells only if each cell is contracting homogeneously and if cells anatomically arranged in series are mechanically coupled. These two assumptions were tested and shown to be valid for the pig carotid media under certain conditions. Homogeneity of cellular responses in carotid strips was estimated from the motion of markers on the tissue during K+ -induced isometric contractions. When tissues were stretched to L0 (the optimum length for force generation), there was little marker movement on stimulation. However, considerable marker movement was observed on stimulation at shorter muscle lengths, reflecting localized shortening or stretching. The mechanical coupling of the very small cells in the media was determined by measuring the dependence of cell length on tissue length. Tissues were fixed with glutaraldehyde during isometric contractions at various tissue lengths (0.4--1.1 x L0). The fixed tissues were macerated with acid and the lengths of the dispersed cells were measured. Cell lengths were broadly distributed at all muscle lengths. However, the direct proportionality between mean cell length and muscle length (as a fraction of L0) indicated that cells which are anatomically in series are coupled force-transmitting structures. We conclude that valid estimates of cellular mechanical function in this preparation can be obtained from tissue measurements at lengths greater than about 0.9L0.  相似文献   

17.
Cellular cardiac preparations in which spontaneous activity was suppressed by EGTA buffering were isolated by microdissection. Uniform and reproducible contractions were induced by iontophoretically released calcium ions. No effects of a diffusional barrier to calcium ions between the micropipette and the contractile system were detected since the sensitivity of the mechanical performance for calcium was the same regardless of whether a constant amount of calcium ions was released from a single micropipette or from two micropipettes positioned at different sites along the longitudinal axis of the preparation. Force development, muscle length, and shortening velocity of eitherisometric or isotopic contractions were measured simultaneously. Initial length, and hence preload of the preparation were established by means of an electronic stop and any additional load was sensed as afterload. Mechanical performance was derived from force velocity relations and from the interrelationship between simultaneously measured force, length, and shortening velocity. From phase plane analysis of shortening velocity vs, instantaneous length during shortening and from load clamp experiments, the interrelationship between force, shortening, and velocity was shown to be independent of time during the major portion of shortening. Moreover, peak force, shortening, and velocity of shortening depended on the amount of calcium ions in the medium at low and high ionic strength.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of acclimation of striped bass to cold (5 degrees C) and warm (25 degrees C) temperatures upon ultrastructural features of white axial skeletal muscle are quantified. Surface density of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) increased by almost 30%, and SR volume density increased by about 20% during cold acclimation. Proliferation of SR suggests an increase in available SR surface for re-sequestration of Ca2+ and a decrease in diffusion path length for Ca2+ during cold acclimation. Average cross-sectional areas and cross-sectional perimeters of myofibrils situated in the center of muscle fibers decreased during cold acclimation by approximately 20% and 11%, respectively. Additionally, average major and minor axes of ellipses fit to central myofibrillar cross-sections decreased by approximately 12% and 8%, respectively, during cold acclimation. These measurements define a decrease in average myofibrillar diameter and suggest a decrease in diffusion path length for Ca2+ to and from myofibrillar activation sites. Measurements of peripheral myofibrils that had elongated profiles in cross-sections indicate that maximum profile length of these myofibrils decreases by about 17%. Peripheral myofibrils may break up into smaller myofibrils with more rounded cross-sectional profiles during cold acclimation. SR Ca2+-ATPase of white axial muscle was also measured in unfractionated homogenates and in crude SR-enriched subcellular fractions from cold- and warm-acclimated striped bass. No difference in SR Ca2+-ATPase activity per g wet weight was observed between cold- and warm-acclimated animals. Lack of increase in SR Ca2+-ATPase per g wet weight, despite a significant proliferation of SR, probably results in a decrease in average Ca2+-ATPase pump density within the SR membrane during cold acclimation. Thus, compensation for decreased diffusion coefficient of Ca2+ during cold acclimation appears due to the combined effects of proliferation of SR surface density and a decrease in average myofibrillar diameter.  相似文献   

19.
Common carp (Cyprinus carpio L.) were reared from hatching until 61 mm total length (TL) at 21 degrees C. At 14 weeks and 20 weeks post-hatch, corresponding to initial lengths of 30 mm and 44 mm respectively, fish were acclimated to 10 degrees C using a rate of cooling of 1 degrees C per day. A statistical model was used to compare the time course in the change of white muscle myofibrillar ATPase activity with temperature acclimation. The myosin heavy chain (MHC) composition of white muscle myofibrils was investigated using peptide mapping. A significant increase in myofibrillar ATPase activity was observed after 2-3 weeks in the 44 mm group, but not until 4-5 weeks in the 30 mm group. when they had reached 37 mm TL. The MHC banding pattern of 120 mm TL fish acclimated to 10 degrees C or 21 degrees C for a minimum of 6 weeks were distinct from each other. The MHC peptide map characteristic of 10-degrees C-acclimated fish was not observed in individuals less than 37 mm length. We therefore conclude that the capacity to alter the composition and properties of myofibrils with cold acclimation is acquired in juvenile carp at around 37 mm TL.  相似文献   

20.
The specific aim of this paper is to review the effects of epimuscular myofascial force transmission on muscular mechanics and present some new results on finite element modeling of non-isolated aponeurotomized muscle in order to discuss the dependency of mechanics of spastic muscle, as well as surgery for restoration of function on such force transmission.

The etiology of the effects of spasticity on muscular mechanics is not fully understood. Clinically, such effects feature typically a limited joint range of motion, which at the muscle level must originate from altered muscle length–force characteristics, in particular a limited muscle length range of force exertion. In studies performed to understand what is different in spastic muscle and what the effects of remedial surgery are, muscle is considered as being independent of its surroundings. Conceivably, this is because the classical approach in muscle mechanics is built on experimenting with dissected muscles. Certainly, such approach allowed improving our understanding of fundamental muscle physiology yet it yielded implicitly a narrow point of view of considering muscle length–force characteristics as a fixed property of the muscle itself.

However, within its context of its intact connective tissue surroundings (the in vivo condition) muscle is not an isolated and independent entity. Instead, collagenous linkages between epimysia of adjacent muscles provide direct intermuscular connections, and structures such as the neurovascular tracts provide indirect intermuscular connections. Moreover, compartmental boundaries (e.g., intermuscular septa, interosseal membranes, periost and compartmental fascia) are continuous with neurovascular tracts and connect muscular and non-muscular tissues at several locations additional to the tendon origins and insertions. Epimuscular myofascial force transmission occurring via this integral system of connections has major effects on muscular mechanics including substantial proximo-distal force differences, sizable changes in the determinants of muscle length–force characteristics (e.g. a condition dependent shift in muscle optimum length to a different length or variable muscle optimal force) explained by major serial and parallel distributions of sarcomere lengths. Therefore, due to epimuscular myofascial force transmission, muscle length–force characteristics are variable and muscle length range of force exertion cannot be considered as a fixed property of the muscle.

The findings reviewed presently show that acutely, the mechanical mechanisms manipulated in remedial surgery are dominated by epimuscular myofascial force transmission. Conceivably, this is also true for the mechanism of adaptation during and after recovery from surgery. Moreover, stiffened epimuscular connections and therefore a stiffened integral system of intra- and epimuscular myofascial force transmission are indicated to affect the properties of spastic muscle. We suggest that important advancements in our present understanding of such properties, variability in the outcome of surgery and considerable recurrence of the impeded function after recovery cannot be made without taking into account the effects of epimuscular myofascial force transmission.  相似文献   


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