Cecchi G, Griffiths P J, Taylor S
Biophys J. 1986 Feb;49(2):437-51. doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(86)83653-0.
Single fibers, isolated intact from frog skeletal muscles, were held firmly very near to each end by stiff metal clasps fastened to the tendons. The fibers were then placed horizontally between two steel hooks inserted in eyelets of the tendon clasps. One hook was attached to a capacitance gauge force transducer (resonance frequency up to approximately 50 kHz) and the other was attached to a moving-coil length changer. This allowed us to impose small, rapid releases (complete in less than 0.15 ms) and high frequency oscillations (up to 13 kHz) to one end of a resting or contracting fiber and measure the consequences at the other end with fast time resolution at 4 to 6 degrees C. The stiffness of short fibers (1.8-2.6 mm) was determined directly from the ratio of force to length variations produced by the length changer. The resonance frequency of short fibers was so high (approximately 40 kHz) that intrinsic oscillations were not detectably excited. The stiffness of long fibers, on the other hand, was calculated from measurement of the mechanical resonance frequency of a fiber. Using both short and long fibers, we measured the sinusoids of force at one end of a contracting fiber that were produced by relatively small sinusoidal length changes at the other end. The amplitudes of the sinusoidal length changes were small compared with the size of step changes that produce nonlinear force-extension relations. The sinusoids of force from long fibers changed amplitude and shifted phase with changes in oscillation frequency in a manner expected of a transmission line composed of mass, compliance, and viscosity, similar to that modelled by (Ford, L. E., A. F. Huxley, and R. M. Simmons, 1981, J. Physiol. (Lond.), 311:219-249). A rapid release during the plateau of tetanic tension in short fibers caused a fall in force and stiffness, a relative change in stiffness that putatively was much smaller than that of force. Our results are, for the most part, consistent with the cross-bridge model of force generation proposed by Huxley, A. F., and R. M. Simmons (1971, Nature (Lond.), 213:533-538). However, stiffness in short fibers developed markedly faster than force during the tetanus rise. Thus our findings show the presence of one or more noteworthy cross-bridge states at the onset and during the rise of active tension towards a plateau in that attachment apparently is followed by a relatively long delay before force generation occurs. A set of equations is given in the Appendix that describes the frequency dependence of the applied sinusoid and its response. This model predicts that frequency dependent changes can be used as a measure of a change in stiffness.
从青蛙骨骼肌中完整分离出的单根肌纤维,其两端附近通过固定在肌腱上的硬质金属夹牢固固定。然后将肌纤维水平放置在插入肌腱夹小孔中的两个钢钩之间。一个钢钩连接到电容式测力传感器(共振频率高达约50kHz),另一个钢钩连接到动圈式长度变换器。这使我们能够对处于静息或收缩状态的肌纤维一端施加小幅度、快速的释放(在不到0.15毫秒内完成)和高频振荡(高达13kHz),并在4至6摄氏度下以快速的时间分辨率测量另一端的结果。短肌纤维(1.8 - 2.6毫米)的刚度直接由长度变换器产生的力与长度变化的比值确定。短肌纤维的共振频率非常高(约40kHz),以至于无法检测到固有振荡的激发。另一方面,长肌纤维的刚度是通过测量肌纤维的机械共振频率来计算的。使用短肌纤维和长肌纤维,我们测量了收缩肌纤维一端由另一端相对较小的正弦长度变化产生的力的正弦曲线。与产生非线性力 - 伸长关系的阶跃变化相比,正弦长度变化的幅度较小。长肌纤维的力的正弦曲线随着振荡频率的变化而改变幅度并发生相位偏移,其方式符合由质量、顺应性和粘性组成的传输线的预期,类似于(福特,L.E.,A.F.赫胥黎和R.M.西蒙斯,1981年,《生理学杂志》(伦敦),311:219 - 249)所建立的模型。短肌纤维强直张力平台期的快速释放导致力和刚度下降,刚度的相对变化据推测比力的相对变化小得多。我们的结果在很大程度上与赫胥黎,A.F.和R.M.西蒙斯(1971年,《自然》(伦敦)杂志,213:533 - 538)提出的力产生的横桥模型一致。然而,在破伤风上升期间,短肌纤维的刚度发展明显快于力。因此,我们的研究结果表明,在主动张力开始上升并趋向于平台期时,存在一个或多个值得注意的横桥状态,因为附着之后显然会有相对较长的延迟才会产生力。附录中给出了一组方程,描述了所施加正弦曲线的频率依赖性及其响应。该模型预测,频率依赖性变化可用于衡量刚度的变化。