Cardiovascular Division, National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial Centre for Translational and Experimental Medicine, Imperial College London, Hammersmith Campus, Du Cane Road, London, W12 0NN, UK.
J Muscle Res Cell Motil. 2019 Jun;40(2):69-76. doi: 10.1007/s10974-019-09526-w. Epub 2019 Jun 21.
The study of muscle and contractility is an unusual scientific endeavour since it has from the start been focussed on one problem-What makes muscle work?-and yet has needed a vast range of different approaches and techniques to study it. Its uniqueness lies in the fundamental fascination of a large scale molecular machine that converts chemical energy into mechanical energy at ambient temperature and with high efficiency that is also controlled by an exquisitely intricate yet utterly reliable regulatory system and is an essential component of animal life. The investigation of muscle is as innovative as any other field of research. As soon as one approach appears to be played out another comes along. It is instructive to consider this as a series of waves of novel and heightened activity starting in the 1950s. The thesis of this article is that we are approaching the fourth wave with the recent rise of interest in small molecules as research tools and possible therapies for muscle diseases.
肌肉和收缩性的研究是一项不寻常的科学工作,因为它从一开始就专注于一个问题——是什么使肌肉工作?——但需要用大量不同的方法和技术来研究它。它的独特之处在于一种大规模分子机器的基本吸引力,这种机器在环境温度下将化学能高效地转化为机械能,而且还受到极其复杂但又非常可靠的调节系统的控制,是动物生命的重要组成部分。对肌肉的研究与其他任何研究领域一样具有创新性。一旦一种方法似乎已经用尽,另一种方法就会出现。考虑到这是一系列始于 20 世纪 50 年代的新颖而高度活跃的浪潮,这是很有启发性的。本文的论点是,随着小分子作为研究工具和肌肉疾病潜在治疗方法的兴趣的最近兴起,我们正在迎来第四波浪潮。