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Myosin isoforms and fibre types in jaw-closing muscles of australian marsupials
Authors:Joseph F. Y. Hoh  Lucia H. D. Kang  Louise G. Sieber  Jacqueline H. Y. Lim  Wendy W. H. Zhong
Affiliation:(1) Discipline of Physiology and Institute for Biomedical Research, School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Bldg F13, The University of Sydney, 2006 Sydney, NSW, Australia
Abstract:Myosin heavy chains (MyHCs) and fibre types in the masseter muscle of seven species of Australian marsupials (brushtail and ringtail possums, bettong, bandicoot, dunnart, two species of antechinuses) spanning three orders were studied by native myosin electrophoresis, SDS-PAGE, immunoblotting and immunohistochemistry. We found only two fibre types in the masseter muscles of these animals: (1) masticatory fibres expressing masticatory MyHC, and (2) hybrid α/β fibres that co-express α-cardiac and β-cardiac MyHCs. Masticatory fibres predominate in most species, being appropriate for predation or for chewing tough vegetable matter. The relative abundance of α/β fibres decreased from 60% to 0 in the order: ringtail possum > brushtail possum > bettong > bandicoot > dunnart/antechinus. These variations in masseter fibre type are correlated with decreasing amounts of vegetable matter in the diets of these animals. The results are in contrast to earlier work on masseter fibres of macropodids that expressed α-cardiac MyHC almost homogeneously. The fact that the bettong (Family: Potoroidae), which belong to the same marsupial superfamily (Macropodoidea) as kangaroos and wallabies (Family: Macropodidae), has not specialized in the exclusive expression of α-cardiac MyHC as members of the latter family suggests that this specialization was of recent phylogenetic origin (30 million years before present).
Keywords:Muscle fibre types  Masticatory  Marsupial
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