Gans C, Gaunt A S
Department of Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 48109.
J Biomech. 1991;24 Suppl 1:53-65. doi: 10.1016/0021-9290(91)90377-y.
Animal muscles generate forces and induce movements at desirable rates. These roles are interactive and must be considered together. Performance of the organism and survival of the species also involve potential optimization of control and of energy consumption. Further, individual variability arising partly via ontogeny and partly from phylogenetic history often has pronounced and sometime conflicting effects on structures and their uses. Hence, animal bodies are generally adequate for their tasks rather than being elegantly matched to them. For muscle, matching to role is reflected at all levels of muscular organization, from the nature of the sarcoplasm and contractile filaments to architectural arrangements of the parts and whole of organs. Vertebrate muscles are often analyzed by mapping their placement and then "explaining" this on the basis of currently observed roles. A recent alternative asks the obverse; given a mass of tissue that may be developed and maintained at a particular cost, what predictions do physical principles permit about its placement. Three architectural patterns that deserve discussion are the classical arrangement of fibers in pinnate patterns, the more recent assumption of sarcomere equivalence, and the issue of compartmentation. All have potential functional implications. 1. The assumption of equivalence of the sarcomeres of motor units allows predictions of the fiber length between sites of origin and insertion. In musculoskeletal systems that induce rotation, the observed (but not the pinnation-associated) insertion angle will differ with the radial lines on which the fibers insert. In a dynamic contraction inducing rotation, a shift of moment arm has no effect for muscles of equal mass. 2. Classical pinnate muscles contain many relatively short fibers positioned in parallel but at an angle to the whole muscle, reducing the per fiber force contribution. However, the total physiological cross-section and total muscle force are thus increased relative to arrangements with fibers parallel to the whole muscle. Equivalent muscles may be placed in various volumetric configurations matching other demands of the organism. The loss of fiber force due to (pinnate, not equivalent) angulation is compensated for by the reduced shortening of fibers in multipinnate arrays. 3. Compartmentation, i.e., the subdivision of muscles into independently controlled, spatially discrete volumes, is likely ubiquitous. Differential activation of the columns of radial arrays may facilitate change of vector and with this of function. Compartmentation is apt to be particularly important in strap muscles with short fiber architecture; their motor units generally occupy columnar, rather than transversely stacked, subdivisions; this may affect recovery from fiber atrophy and degeneration.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
动物肌肉能产生力量,并以理想的速率诱发运动。这些作用相互影响,必须综合考虑。生物体的表现和物种的生存还涉及控制和能量消耗的潜在优化。此外,部分源于个体发育、部分源于系统发育历史的个体差异,往往对结构及其用途有显著且有时相互冲突的影响。因此,动物的身体总体上足以完成其任务,而非与任务完美匹配。对于肌肉而言,与功能的匹配体现在肌肉组织的各个层面,从肌浆和收缩细丝的性质到器官各部分及整体的结构排列。脊椎动物的肌肉通常通过绘制其位置,然后根据当前观察到的功能来“解释”其位置。最近有一种相反的方法;给定一块可能以特定成本发育和维持的组织,物理原理对其位置有哪些预测?有三种结构模式值得探讨:羽状模式中纤维的经典排列、最近关于肌节等效性的假设以及分隔问题。所有这些都有潜在的功能意义。1. 运动单位肌节等效性的假设允许预测起点和止点之间的纤维长度。在引起旋转的肌肉骨骼系统中,观察到的(但不是与羽状相关的)止点角度会因纤维插入的径向线而有所不同。在动态收缩引起旋转时,对于质量相等的肌肉,力臂的变化没有影响。2. 经典的羽状肌包含许多相对较短的纤维,这些纤维平行排列但与整个肌肉成一定角度,从而降低了每根纤维的力量贡献。然而,相对于纤维与整个肌肉平行排列的情况,总的生理横截面积和总肌肉力量因此增加。等效的肌肉可以以各种体积配置放置,以满足生物体的其他需求。由于(羽状而非等效)成角导致的纤维力量损失,通过多羽状排列中纤维缩短的减少得到补偿。3. 分隔,即把肌肉细分为独立控制、空间上离散的体积,可能普遍存在。径向排列的柱体的差异激活可能有助于向量的改变以及功能的改变。分隔在具有短纤维结构的带状肌中可能特别重要;它们的运动单位通常占据柱状而非横向堆叠的细分部分;这可能会影响纤维萎缩和退化后的恢复。(摘要截断于400字)