Université Paris Est, Modélisation et Simulation Multi Echelle, MSME CNRS-UMR 8208, 61 Avenue du Général de Gaulle, 94010 Créteil, France.
Rep Prog Phys. 2018 Mar;81(3):036602. doi: 10.1088/1361-6633/aa7b9e.
In this paper we report, clarify and broaden various recent efforts to complement the chemistry-centered models of force generation in (skeletal) muscles by mechanics-centered models. The physical mechanisms of interest can be grouped into two classes: passive and active. The main passive effect is the fast force recovery which does not require the detachment of myosin cross-bridges from actin filaments and can operate without a specialized supply of metabolic fuel (ATP). In mechanical terms, it can be viewed as a collective folding-unfolding phenomenon in the system of interacting bi-stable units and modeled by near equilibrium Langevin dynamics. The active force generation mechanism operates at slow time scales, requires detachment and is crucially dependent on ATP hydrolysis. The underlying mechanical processes take place far from equilibrium and are represented by stochastic models with broken time reversal symmetry implying non-potentiality, correlated noise or multiple reservoirs. The modeling approaches reviewed in this paper deal with both active and passive processes and support from the mechanical perspective the biological point of view that phenomena involved in slow (active) and fast (passive) force generation are tightly intertwined. They reveal, however, that biochemical studies in solution, macroscopic physiological measurements and structural analysis do not provide by themselves all the necessary insights into the functioning of the organized contractile system. In particular, the reviewed body of work emphasizes the important role of long-range interactions and criticality in securing the targeted mechanical response in the physiological regime of isometric contractions. The importance of the purely mechanical micro-scale modeling is accentuated at the end of the paper where we address the puzzling issue of the stability of muscle response on the so called 'descending limb' of the isometric tetanus.
在本文中,我们报告、澄清和扩展了最近的各种努力,这些努力旨在通过力学为中心的模型来补充(骨骼)肌肉中以化学为中心的力产生模型。我们感兴趣的物理机制可以分为两类:被动和主动。主要的被动效应是快速力恢复,它不需要肌球蛋白横桥从肌动蛋白丝上脱离,并且可以在没有专门的代谢燃料(ATP)供应的情况下运行。从力学的角度来看,它可以被看作是一个相互作用的双稳态单元系统中的集体折叠-展开现象,并通过近平衡 Langevin 动力学进行建模。主动力产生机制在慢时间尺度上运行,需要脱离,并且关键依赖于 ATP 水解。潜在的机械过程发生在远离平衡的地方,用具有时间反转对称性破缺的随机模型来表示,这意味着非势能、相关噪声或多个储层。本文综述的建模方法既处理主动过程,也处理被动过程,从力学角度支持了生物学观点,即涉及慢(主动)和快(被动)力产生的现象紧密交织在一起。然而,它们揭示了生化在溶液中的研究、宏观生理测量和结构分析本身并不能提供对有组织的收缩系统功能的所有必要见解。特别是,所综述的工作强调了长程相互作用和临界性在确保生理等长收缩状态下的靶向机械响应的重要作用。在本文的最后,我们讨论了肌肉在等长抽搐的所谓“下降支”上的反应稳定性这一令人困惑的问题,强调了纯粹的机械微观尺度建模的重要性。