Institute of Systematic Zoology and Evolutionary Biology, Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena, Germany.
Front Zool. 2011 Feb 10;8(1):4. doi: 10.1186/1742-9994-8-4.
The axial musculoskeletal system represents the plesiomorphic locomotor engine of the vertebrate body, playing a central role in locomotion. In craniates, the evolution of the postcranial skeleton is characterized by two major transformations. First, the axial skeleton became increasingly functionally and morphologically regionalized. Second, the axial-based locomotion plesiomorphic for craniates became progressively appendage-based with the evolution of extremities in tetrapods. These changes, together with the transition to land, caused increased complexity in the planes in which axial movements occur and moments act on the body and were accompanied by profound changes in axial muscle function. To increase our understanding of the evolutionary transformations of the structure and function of the perivertebral musculature, this review integrates recent anatomical and physiological data (e.g., muscle fiber types, activation patterns) with gross-anatomical and kinematic findings for pivotal craniate taxa. This information is mapped onto a phylogenetic hypothesis to infer the putative character set of the last common ancestor of the respective taxa and to conjecture patterns of locomotor and muscular evolution. The increasing anatomical and functional complexity in the muscular arrangement during craniate evolution is associated with changes in fiber angulation and fiber-type distribution, i.e., increasing obliqueness in fiber orientation and segregation of fatigue-resistant fibers in deeper muscle regions. The loss of superficial fatigue-resistant fibers may be related to the profound gross anatomical reorganization of the axial musculature during the tetrapod evolution. The plesiomorphic function of the axial musculature -mobilization- is retained in all craniates. Along with the evolution of limbs and the subsequent transition to land, axial muscles additionally function to globally stabilize the trunk against inertial and extrinsic limb muscle forces as well as gravitational forces. Associated with the evolution of sagittal mobility and a parasagittal limb posture, axial muscles in mammals also stabilize the trunk against sagittal components of extrinsic limb muscle action as well as the inertia of the body's center of mass. Thus, the axial system is central to the static and dynamic control of the body posture in all craniates and, in gnathostomes, additionally provides the foundation for the mechanical work of the appendicular system.
轴向骨骼肌肉系统代表了脊椎动物身体的原始运动引擎,在运动中起着核心作用。在有头类动物中,后躯骨骼的进化表现出两个主要的转变。首先,轴向骨骼在功能和形态上变得越来越区域化。其次,有头类动物的原始基于轴向的运动逐渐被四肢进化所取代。这些变化,加上向陆地的过渡,导致了轴向运动发生的平面的复杂性增加,以及身体承受的力矩作用增加,同时伴随着轴向肌肉功能的深刻变化。为了提高我们对椎旁肌肉结构和功能进化转变的理解,本综述整合了最近的解剖学和生理学数据(例如肌肉纤维类型、激活模式)与关键有头类动物的大体解剖学和运动学发现。这些信息被映射到一个系统发育假说上,以推断各自分类群最后共同祖先的假定特征集,并推测运动和肌肉进化的模式。在有头类动物的进化过程中,肌肉排列的解剖学和功能复杂性的增加与纤维角度和纤维类型分布的变化有关,即纤维方向的倾斜度增加和更深肌肉区域中耐疲劳纤维的分离。浅层耐疲劳纤维的丧失可能与四肢进化过程中轴向肌肉的深刻大体解剖学重组有关。轴向肌肉的原始功能——动员——在所有有头类动物中都得到保留。随着四肢的进化和随后向陆地的过渡,轴向肌肉还可以全局稳定躯干,以抵抗惯性和外部肢体肌肉力量以及重力。与矢状运动的进化和副矢状肢体姿势相关,哺乳动物的轴向肌肉还可以稳定躯干,以抵抗外部肢体肌肉作用的矢状分量以及身体质心的惯性。因此,轴向系统是所有有头类动物静态和动态控制身体姿势的核心,在颌形类动物中,还为附肢系统的机械工作提供了基础。