Literature DB >> 12231277

Models of skeletal muscle to explain the increase in passive stiffness in desmin knockout muscle.

J Anderson1, Z Li, F Goubel.   

Abstract

Absence of desmin in skeletal muscle was found to induce an increase in passive stiffness. The present study aimed at developing rheological models of passive muscle to explain this stiffening. Models were elaborated by using experimental data depicting muscle viscoelastic behaviour. The experimental protocol included stepwise extension tests applied on control and desmin knockout soleus muscles from mice. Linear and non-linear models were composed of elastic and viscous elements. They were constructed with the aim at taking the presence or absence of desmin into account by simulating desmin as an elastic element. Furthermore, associated adaptation of connective tissues in absence of desmin was modelled as an additional elastic element. Differences in passive behaviour induced by absence of desmin were predicted by using a linear model and a non-linear one. The non-linear model was selected because: (1) it is able to predict experimental viscoelastic kinetics accounting for the increase in passive stiffness in muscles lacking desmin, (2) its design is consistent with morphological data, and (3) stiffness characteristics of its elements are in accordance with the literature. Finally, this modelling approach demonstrates that both absence of desmin and adaptation of connective tissue are required to explain the increase in passive stiffness in desmin knockout muscles.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12231277     DOI: 10.1016/s0021-9290(02)00170-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biomech        ISSN: 0021-9290            Impact factor:   2.712


  8 in total

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4.  The passive properties of muscle fibers are velocity dependent.

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5.  Skeletal muscle tensile strain dependence: Hyperviscoelastic nonlinearity.

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7.  Growing Old Too Early: Skeletal Muscle Single Fiber Biomechanics in Ageing R349P Desmin Knock-in Mice Using the MyoRobot Technology.

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8.  Optical prediction of single muscle fiber force production using a combined biomechatronics and second harmonic generation imaging approach.

Authors:  Dominik Schneidereit; Stefanie Nübler; Gerhard Prölß; Barbara Reischl; Sebastian Schürmann; Oliver J Müller; Oliver Friedrich
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  8 in total

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