Eng Carolyn M, Azizi Emanuel, Roberts Thomas J
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Brown University, 171 Meeting St, Box GB204, Providence, RI 02912, USA.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Irvine, 321 Steinhaus Hall, Irvine, CA 92697, USA.
Integr Comp Biol. 2018 Aug 1;58(2):207-218. doi: 10.1093/icb/icy054.
In skeletal muscle, interactions between contractile and connective tissue elements at multiple scales result in emergent properties that determine mechanical performance. One of these phenomena is architectural gearing, which is quantified as the ratio of muscle velocity to muscle fiber velocity. Many pennate muscles operate with a gear ratio greater than one because muscles shorten through a combination of muscle fiber shortening and fiber rotation. Within a muscle, gearing is variable across contractions. During low force contractions, muscles operate at high gear while muscles operate at low gear during high force contractions. This variable gearing has a significant impact on muscle performance as muscle architectural changes favor muscle speed during fast contractions and muscle force during slow, high force contractions. We hypothesize that gearing in any given contraction is determined by the dynamic interaction of fiber-generated forces, fluid force transmission, and the elastic behavior of intramuscular connective tissues. Because muscle is isovolumetric, muscle fibers must bulge radially when they shorten. Radial bulging and fiber-generated forces off-axis from the muscle line of action exert forces that load connective tissues that ensheath fibers, fascicles, and the whole muscle. The way in which fluid pressures and fiber forces interact to load connective tissues in three-dimensions remains poorly understood because of the complex and multiscale nature of these interactions. Here we review evidence for variable gearing in pennate muscles, present a conceptual model that describes the fundamental interactions that determine gearing, and discuss where gaps remain in our understanding of the determinants and consequences of muscle shape change and variable gearing.
在骨骼肌中,收缩组织和结缔组织成分在多个尺度上的相互作用产生了决定机械性能的涌现特性。其中一种现象是结构传动,它被量化为肌肉速度与肌纤维速度的比值。许多羽状肌的传动比大于1,因为肌肉通过肌纤维缩短和纤维旋转的组合来缩短。在一块肌肉内,传动比在不同收缩过程中是可变的。在低力收缩期间,肌肉以高传动比运作,而在高力收缩期间肌肉以低传动比运作。这种可变传动对肌肉性能有重大影响,因为肌肉结构变化在快速收缩时有利于肌肉速度,而在缓慢的高力收缩时有利于肌肉力量。我们假设在任何给定收缩中,传动比由纤维产生的力、流体动力传递以及肌肉内结缔组织的弹性行为的动态相互作用决定。由于肌肉是等容的,肌纤维缩短时必须径向膨胀。径向膨胀以及偏离肌肉作用线的纤维产生的力会施加力,从而加载包裹纤维、肌束和整个肌肉的结缔组织。由于这些相互作用的复杂性和多尺度性质,流体压力和纤维力在三维空间中相互作用以加载结缔组织的方式仍知之甚少。在这里,我们回顾羽状肌中可变传动的证据,提出一个描述决定传动比的基本相互作用的概念模型,并讨论在我们对肌肉形状变化和可变传动的决定因素及后果的理解中仍存在哪些差距。