Miyake Tsutomu, Kumamoto Minayori, Iwata Masamitsu, Sato Ryuichi, Okabe Masataka, Koie Hiroshi, Kumai Nori, Fujii Kenichi, Matsuzaki Koji, Nakamura Chiho, Yamauchi Shinya, Yoshida Kosuke, Yoshimura Kohtaroh, Komoda Akira, Uyeno Teruya, Abe Yoshitaka
The Graduate School of Science and Technology, Keio University, Tokyo, Japan.
Department of Anatomy, The Jikei University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2016 Sep;299(9):1203-23. doi: 10.1002/ar.23392. Epub 2016 Jul 22.
To investigate the morphology and evolutionary origin of muscles in vertebrate limbs, we conducted anatomical dissections, computed tomography and kinematic analyses on the pectoral fin of the African coelacanth, Latimeria chalumnae. We discovered nine antagonistic pairs of pronators and supinators that are anatomically and functionally distinct from the abductor and adductor superficiales and profundi. In particular, the first pronator and supinator pair represents mono- and biarticular muscles; a portion of the muscle fibers is attached to ridges on the humerus and is separated into two monoarticular muscles, whereas, as a biarticular muscle, the main body is inserted into the radius by crossing two joints from the shoulder girdle. This pair, consisting of a pronator and supinator, constitutes a muscle arrangement equivalent to two human antagonistic pairs of monoarticular muscles and one antagonistic pair of biarticular muscles in the stylopod between the shoulder and elbow joints. Our recent kinesiological and biomechanical engineering studies on human limbs have demonstrated that two antagonistic pairs of monoarticular muscles and one antagonistic pair of biarticular muscles in the stylopod (1) coordinately control output force and force direction at the wrist and ankle and (2) achieve a contact task to carry out weight-bearing motion and maintain stable posture. Therefore, along with dissections of the pectoral fins in two lungfish species, Neoceratodus forsteri and Protopterus aethiopicus, we discuss the functional and evolutionary implications for the fin-to-limb transition and subsequent evolution of tetrapods. Anat Rec, 299:1203-1223, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
为了研究脊椎动物肢体肌肉的形态和进化起源,我们对非洲腔棘鱼(Latimeria chalumnae)的胸鳍进行了解剖、计算机断层扫描和运动学分析。我们发现了九对相互拮抗的旋前肌和旋后肌,它们在解剖结构和功能上与浅部和深部的外展肌和内收肌不同。特别是,第一对旋前肌和旋后肌代表单关节和双关节肌肉;一部分肌纤维附着于肱骨上的嵴,并被分成两块单关节肌肉,而作为双关节肌肉,其主体通过从肩带跨越两个关节而插入桡骨。这一对由旋前肌和旋后肌组成的肌肉排列,相当于人类在肩关节和肘关节之间的上肢中两对相互拮抗的单关节肌肉和一对相互拮抗的双关节肌肉。我们最近对人类肢体进行的运动学和生物力学工程研究表明,上肢中的两对相互拮抗的单关节肌肉和一对相互拮抗的双关节肌肉(1)协同控制手腕和脚踝处的输出力和力的方向,(2)完成负重运动和维持稳定姿势的接触任务。因此,连同对两种肺鱼(澳洲肺鱼Neoceratodus forsteri和非洲肺鱼Protopterus aethiopicus)胸鳍的解剖,我们讨论了鳍到肢体转变以及随后四足动物进化的功能和进化意义。《解剖学记录》,299:1203 - 1223,2016年。© 2016威利期刊公司。