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Mechanism of force enhancement during and after lengthening of active muscle: a temperature dependence study

Authors :
KW Ranatunga
Gavin J. Pinniger
H Roots
Gerald Offer
Source :
Journal of Muscle Research and Cell Motility. 33:313-325
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2012.

Abstract

The aim of the present study was to examine the temperature dependence of active force in lengthening and shortening muscle. Experiments were done, in vitro, on bundles of intact fibres (fibre length L(0) ~2 mm; sarcomere length ~2.5 μm) isolated from a rat fast muscle (flexor hallucis brevis) and a ramp length change of 5-7% L(0) was applied on the plateau of an isometric tetanic contraction. Ramp lengthening increased and ramp shortening decreased the muscle tension to new approximately steady levels in a velocity-dependent way. The isometric tension and the lower steady tension reached at a given shortening velocity, increased with warming from 10 to 35 °C and the relation between tension and reciprocal absolute temperature was sigmoidal. However, the tension-temperature curve of shortening muscle was sharper and shifted to higher temperature with increased velocity. In contrast, the enhanced steady tension during lengthening at a given velocity was largely temperature-insensitive within the same temperature range; we hypothesize that the tension-temperature curve may be shifted to lower temperatures in lengthening muscle. Consequently, when normalised to the isometric tension at each temperature, the tension during lengthening at a given velocity decreased exponentially with increase of temperature. The residual force enhancement that remains after ramp lengthening showed a similar behaviour and was markedly reduced in warming from 10 to 35 °C. The findings are consistent with the thesis that active force generation in muscle is endothermic and strain-sensitive; during shortening with a faster crossbridge cycle it becomes more pronounced, but during lengthening it becomes depressed as the cycle slows in a velocity-dependent way. The residual force enhancement may be caused by the same process in addition to non-crossbridge mechanism(s).

Details

ISSN :
15732657 and 01424319
Volume :
33
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Muscle Research and Cell Motility
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c9c942de540ab0a8c85fd24b5a8a3b30
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10974-012-9307-8