Department of Community and Family Medicine, Doctor of Physical Therapy Program, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC 27708, USA.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2013 May;151(1):120-34. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.22260. Epub 2013 Apr 3.
The jaw-closing muscles are responsible for generating many of the forces and movements associated with feeding. Muscle physiologic cross-sectional area (PCSA) and fiber length are two architectural parameters that heavily influence muscle function. While there have been numerous comparative studies of hominoid and hominin craniodental and mandibular morphology, little is known about hominoid jaw-muscle fiber architecture. We present novel data on masseter and temporalis internal muscle architecture for small- and large-bodied hominoids. Hominoid scaling patterns are evaluated and compared with representative New- (Cebus) and Old-World (Macaca) monkeys. Variation in hominoid jaw-muscle fiber architecture is related to both absolute size and allometry. PCSAs scale close to isometry relative to jaw length in anthropoids, but likely with positive allometry in hominoids. Thus, large-bodied apes may be capable of generating both absolutely and relatively greater muscle forces compared with smaller-bodied apes and monkeys. Compared with extant apes, modern humans exhibit a reduction in masseter PCSA relative to condyle-M1 length but retain relatively long fibers, suggesting humans may have sacrificed relative masseter muscle force during chewing without appreciably altering muscle excursion/contraction velocity. Lastly, craniometric estimates of PCSAs underestimate hominoid masseter and temporalis PCSAs by more than 50% in gorillas, and overestimate masseter PCSA by as much as 30% in humans. These findings underscore the difficulty of accurately estimating jaw-muscle fiber architecture from craniometric measures and suggest models of fossil hominin and hominoid bite forces will be improved by incorporating architectural data in estimating jaw-muscle forces.
闭口肌负责产生与进食相关的许多力量和运动。肌肉生理横截面积(PCSA)和纤维长度是两个对肌肉功能影响很大的结构参数。虽然已经有许多关于人科和人属的颅面和下颌形态的比较研究,但对于人科动物的咀嚼肌纤维结构知之甚少。我们提出了小体型和大体型人科动物的咬肌和颞肌内肌结构的新数据。评估了人科动物的缩放模式,并与代表性的新世界(卷尾猴)和旧世界(猕猴)猴子进行了比较。人科动物的咀嚼肌纤维结构的变化与绝对大小和异速生长有关。在类人猿中,PCSA 与颌骨长度的缩放接近等距,但在人科动物中可能存在正异速生长。因此,与体型较小的猿类和猴子相比,体型较大的猿类可能能够产生更大的绝对和相对肌肉力量。与现生人科动物相比,现代人的咀嚼肌 PCSA 相对于髁突-M1 长度的减少,但保留了相对较长的纤维,这表明人类在咀嚼时可能牺牲了相对较大的咀嚼肌力量,而没有明显改变肌肉的运动速度/收缩速度。最后,颅骨测量法对人科动物咬肌和颞肌 PCSA 的估计低估了大猩猩的咬肌和颞肌 PCSA 超过 50%,对人类的咬肌 PCSA 高估了多达 30%。这些发现强调了从颅骨测量法准确估计咀嚼肌纤维结构的困难,并表明在估计咀嚼肌力量时纳入结构数据将改善对化石人属和人科动物咬合力的模型。