Pinniger G J, Ranatunga K W, Offer G W
Muscle Contraction Group, Department of Physiology, School of Medical Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 1TD, UK.
J Physiol. 2006 Jun 15;573(Pt 3):627-43. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2005.095448. Epub 2006 Apr 20.
Lengthening of active muscle is an essential feature of animal locomotion, but the molecular processes occurring are incompletely understood. We therefore examined and modelled tension responses to ramp stretches (5% fibre length, L0) over a wide range of velocities (0.1-10 L(0) s(-1)) of tetanized intact rat muscle fibre bundles (L0 approximately 2 mm) with a resting sarcomere length of 2.5 microm at 20 degrees C. Tension rose to a peak during stretch and decayed afterwards to a level which was higher than the prestretch tetanic tension. This residual force enhancement was insensitive to velocity. The tension rise during stretch showed an early transition (often appearing as an inflection) at approximately 1 ms. Both the stretch (L1) and the tension rise at this transition increased in proportion to velocity. A second transition, marked by a reduction in slope, occurred at a stretch of approximately 18 nm per half-sarcomere; the rise in tension at this transition increased with velocity towards a plateau. Based on analyses of the velocity dependence of the tension and modelling, we propose that the initial steep increase in tension arises from increasing strain of all attached crossbridges and that the first transition reflects the tension loss due to the original post-stroke heads executing a reverse power stroke. Modelling indicates that the reduction in slope at the second transition occurs when the last of the heads that were attached at the start of the ramp become detached. Thereafter, the crossbridge cycle is largely truncated, with prepower stroke crossbridges rapidly detaching at high strain and attaching at low strain, the tension being borne mainly by the prestroke heads. Analysis of the tension decay after the ramp and the velocity dependence of the peak tension suggest that a non-crossbridge component increasingly develops tension throughout the stretch; this decays only slowly, reaching at 500 ms after the ramp approximately 20% of its peak value. This is supported by the finding that, in the presence of 10 microm N-benzyl-p-toluene sulphonamide (a myosin inhibitor), while isometric tension is reduced to approximately 15%, and the crossbridge contribution to stretch-induced tension rise is reduced to 30-40%, the peak non-crossbridge contribution and the residual force enhancement remain high. We propose that the residual force enhancement is due to changes upon activation in parallel elastic elements, specifically that titin stiffens and C-protein-actin interactions may be recruited.
主动肌的拉长是动物运动的一个基本特征,但其中发生的分子过程尚未完全了解。因此,我们在20℃下,对静息肌节长度为2.5微米、初始长度(L0)约为2毫米的强直收缩完整大鼠肌纤维束,在很宽的速度范围(0.1 - 10L0 s-1)内施加斜坡拉伸(5%纤维长度,L0),并检测和模拟其张力反应。拉伸过程中张力先上升至峰值,随后衰减至高于拉伸前强直张力的水平。这种残余力增强对速度不敏感。拉伸过程中的张力上升在约1毫秒时出现早期转变(常表现为拐点)。在此转变时的拉伸量(L1)和张力上升均与速度成比例增加。第二个转变以斜率降低为标志,发生在每个半肌节约18纳米的拉伸时;此转变时的张力上升随速度增加直至达到平台期。基于对张力速度依赖性的分析和建模,我们提出张力最初的急剧增加源于所有附着的横桥应变增加,且第一个转变反映了由于原处于冲程后状态的头部执行反向动力冲程导致的张力损失。建模表明,当斜坡开始时附着的最后一批头部脱离时,第二个转变处的斜率降低。此后,横桥循环在很大程度上被截断,处于动力冲程前状态的横桥在高应变时迅速脱离,在低应变时附着,张力主要由处于冲程前状态的头部承担。对斜坡后张力衰减以及峰值张力速度依赖性的分析表明,在整个拉伸过程中,一个非横桥成分逐渐产生张力;其衰减缓慢,在斜坡后500毫秒时达到其峰值的约20%。这一发现得到了支持,即在存在10微米N - 苄基 - 对甲苯磺酰胺(一种肌球蛋白抑制剂)时,等长张力降至约15%,横桥对拉伸诱导张力上升的贡献降至30 - 40%,但非横桥的峰值贡献和残余力增强仍很高。我们提出残余力增强是由于激活后平行弹性元件发生变化,具体而言是肌联蛋白变硬且可能募集了C蛋白 - 肌动蛋白相互作用。