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Paradoxes of Hymenoptera flight muscles,extreme machines
Authors:Tony Hickey  Jules Devaux  Vijay Rajagopal  Amelia Power  David Crossman
Affiliation:1.School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand ;2.Department of Physiology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand ;3.Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC Australia ;4.Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand
Abstract:In the Carboniferous, insects evolved flight. Intense selection drove for high performance and approximately 100 million years later, Hymenoptera (bees, wasps and ants) emerged. Some species had proportionately small wings, with apparently impossible aerodynamic challenges including a need for high frequency flight muscles (FMs), powered exclusively off aerobic pathways and resulting in extreme aerobic capacities. Modern insect FMs are the most refined and form large dense blocks that occupy 90% of the thorax. These can beat wings at 200 to 230 Hz, more than double that achieved by standard neuromuscular systems. To do so, rapid repolarisation was circumvented through evolution of asynchronous stimulation, stretch activation, elastic recoil and a paradoxically slow Ca2+ reuptake. While the latter conserves ATP, considerable ATP is demanded at the myofibrils. FMs have diminished sarcoplasmic volumes, and ATP is produced solely by mitochondria, which pack myocytes to maximal limits and have very dense cristae. Gaseous oxygen is supplied directly to mitochondria. While FMs appear to be optimised for function, several unusual paradoxes remain. FMs lack any significant equivalent to the creatine kinase shuttle, and myofibrils are twice as wide as those of within cardiomyocytes. The mitochondrial electron transport systems also release large amounts of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and respiratory complexes do not appear to be present at any exceptional level. Given that the loss of the creatine kinase shuttle and elevated ROS impairs heart function, we question how do FM shuttle adenylates at high rates and tolerate oxidative stress conditions that occur in diseased hearts?
Keywords:Bees   Ants   Extreme contraction rate   Mitochondria   Creatine kinase   Adenylate diffusion
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