Literature DB >> 6685767

Role of cross-bridge distortion in the small-signal mechanical dynamics of insect and rabbit striated muscle.

J Thorson, D C White.   

Abstract

The mechanism of the active tension response of insect fibrillar muscle to step changes and small oscillations of length was re-investigated, following White's demonstration (1983) that the high relaxed stiffness evidently persists during activation and cannot be neglected as had previously been assumed. White's result makes earlier explanations of the small-signal response untenable; the experimental and theoretical studies described here lead to a new class of explanations at the cross-bridge level. The response of an activated muscle to a fast stretch consists of a synchronous tension increase that is followed first by a rapid decay of tension and then by a delayed rise ('stretch activation'). It was shown in glycerinated fibre preparations from the water bug and the bumblebee that subtraction of the relaxed tension response from the active response results in a prominent undershoot of the tension level preceding the step, before the delayed rise of tension. The responses of the same fibres to sinusoidal oscillations, in the frequency range 1-150 Hz, showed an equivalent behaviour, with the active locus circling the relaxed locus in a Nyquist plot, as described by Machin & Pringle (1960). Stiffness was determined during the tension response to a large step (of 1%) by recording the immediate change of tension to a small test step (0.2%), applied at various times after the conditioning step. In the majority of preparations stiffness remained constant or increased during the undershoot of tension. Step and sinusoidal responses with the above features cannot be explained at all by an active component resembling a simple exponential delay. We show, however, that such features are predicted if certain small-signal effects of cross-bridge distortion (previously and erroneously assumed negligible in insect flight muscle for the small-signal case) are incorporated in models of the cross-bridge cycle. Two alternative hypotheses for the effects of distortion are examined: (i) distortion-induced detachments and (ii) distortion-modulated transitions among multiple attached states (Huxley & Simmons, 1971). For the first we also show that the results do not differ qualitatively whether one assumes strain, interfilament displacement or 'bridge recruitment' as the physical correlate of stretch activation. Both of the above explanations account, at least qualitatively, for the observed rapid decay and undershoot of tension following a step increase of length, and for the circling of the active Nyquist-plot loci about the passive locus. The explanation based on distortion-induced detachments, however, appears to be inconsistent with the stiffness measurements.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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Year:  1983        PMID: 6685767      PMCID: PMC1193908          DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.1983.sp014881

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Physiol        ISSN: 0022-3751            Impact factor:   5.182


  20 in total

1.  The physiology of insect fibrillar muscle. III. The effect of sinusoidal changes of length on a beetle flight muscle.

Authors:  K E MACHIN; J W PRINGLE
Journal:  Proc R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  1960-06-14

2.  The relationship of adenosine triphosphatase activity to tension and power output of insect flight muscle.

Authors:  J Pybus; R T Tregear
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  1975-05       Impact factor: 5.182

Review 3.  Distributed relaxation processes in sensory adaptation.

Authors:  J Thorson; M Biederman-Thorson
Journal:  Science       Date:  1974-01-18       Impact factor: 47.728

Review 4.  Theoretical formalism for the sliding filament model of contraction of striated muscle. Part I.

Authors:  T L Hill
Journal:  Prog Biophys Mol Biol       Date:  1974       Impact factor: 3.667

5.  A model for the transient and steady-state mechanical behavior of contracting muscle.

Authors:  F J Julian; K R Sollins; M R Sollins
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  1974-07       Impact factor: 4.033

6.  Proposed mechanism of force generation in striated muscle.

Authors:  A F Huxley; R M Simmons
Journal:  Nature       Date:  1971-10-22       Impact factor: 49.962

7.  Distributed representations for actin-myosin interaction in the oscillatory contraction of muscle.

Authors:  J Thorson; D C White
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  1969-03       Impact factor: 4.033

8.  Temperature and amplitude dependence of tension transients in glycerinated skeletal and insect fibrillar muscle.

Authors:  R H Abbott; G J Steiger
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  1977-03       Impact factor: 5.182

9.  The effects of fibre length and calcium ion concentration on the dynamic response of glycerol extracted insect fibrillar muscle.

Authors:  R H Abbott
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  1973-06       Impact factor: 5.182

10.  Phosphate starvation and the nonlinear dynamics of insect fibrillar flight muscle.

Authors:  D C White; J Thorson
Journal:  J Gen Physiol       Date:  1972-09       Impact factor: 4.086

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  38 in total

1.  Nonlinear myofilament regulatory processes affect frequency-dependent muscle fiber stiffness.

Authors:  K B Campbell; M V Razumova; R D Kirkpatrick; B K Slinker
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2001-10       Impact factor: 4.033

2.  A troponin switch that regulates muscle contraction by stretch instead of calcium.

Authors:  Bogos Agianian; Uros Krzic; Feng Qiu; Wolfgang A Linke; Kevin Leonard; Belinda Bullard
Journal:  EMBO J       Date:  2004-02-12       Impact factor: 11.598

3.  Ca-activation and stretch-activation in insect flight muscle.

Authors:  Marco Linari; Michael K Reedy; Mary C Reedy; Vincenzo Lombardi; Gabriella Piazzesi
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2004-08       Impact factor: 4.033

4.  Fast x-ray recordings reveal dynamic action of contractile and regulatory proteins in stretch-activated insect flight muscle.

Authors:  Hiroyuki Iwamoto; Katsuaki Inoue; Naoto Yagi
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2010-07-07       Impact factor: 4.033

5.  The structural role of high molecular weight tropomyosins in dipteran indirect flight muscle and the effect of phosphorylation.

Authors:  Jesús Mateos; Raúl Herranz; Alberto Domingo; John Sparrow; Roberto Marco
Journal:  J Muscle Res Cell Motil       Date:  2006-06-04       Impact factor: 2.698

6.  Evolution of long-range myofibrillar crystallinity in insect flight muscle as examined by X-ray cryomicrodiffraction.

Authors:  Hiroyuki Iwamoto; Katsuaki Inoue; Naoto Yagi
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2006-03-22       Impact factor: 5.349

7.  Cross-bridge kinetics of fast and slow fibres of cat jaw and limb muscles: correlations with myosin subunit composition.

Authors:  Joseph F Y Hoh; Zhao-Bo Li; Han Qin; Michael K H Hsu; Gunther H Rossmanith
Journal:  J Muscle Res Cell Motil       Date:  2008-03-05       Impact factor: 2.698

Review 8.  Invertebrate muscles: thin and thick filament structure; molecular basis of contraction and its regulation, catch and asynchronous muscle.

Authors:  Scott L Hooper; Kevin H Hobbs; Jeffrey B Thuma
Journal:  Prog Neurobiol       Date:  2008-06-20       Impact factor: 11.685

9.  Sodium/calcium exchange and intracellular calcium buffering in ferret myocardium: an ion-sensitive micro-electrode study.

Authors:  R A Chapman
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  1986-04       Impact factor: 5.182

10.  Influence of V1 and V3 isomyosins on the mechanical behaviour of rat papillary muscle as studied by pseudo-random binary noise modulated length perturbations.

Authors:  G H Rossmanith; J F Hoh; A Kirman; L J Kwan
Journal:  J Muscle Res Cell Motil       Date:  1986-08       Impact factor: 2.698

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