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Contractile activation characteristics of single permeabilized fibres from levator palpebrae superioris, orbicularis oculi and vastus lateralis muscles from humans
Author(s) -
Campbell Síun P.,
Williams David A.,
Frueh Bartley R.,
Lynch Gordon S.
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
the journal of physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.802
H-Index - 240
eISSN - 1469-7793
pISSN - 0022-3751
DOI - 10.1111/j.1469-7793.1999.0615m.x
Subject(s) - anatomy , extraocular muscles , population , fibre type , orbicularis oculi muscle , chemistry , thigh , biology , biophysics , skeletal muscle , medicine , eyelid , ophthalmology , environmental health
1 We investigated the contractile activation characteristics of single membrane‐permeabilized fibres from the following muscles from humans: the levator palpebrae superioris (LPS), an extraocular muscle; the orbicularis oculi (OO), a facial muscle; and the vastus lateralis (VL), a major muscle of the thigh. 2 Single permeabilized muscle fibres were isolated from each of the different muscles, attached to a sensitive force transducer and activated by rapid immersion in buffered solutions of varying [Ca 2+ ] and [Sr 2+ ]. Fibres were allocated into discrete populations based on their contractile characteristics, including their differential force responses during Ca 2+ and Sr 2+ activation. 3 With the exception of one fibre from the LPS, all 152 fibres sampled from the three different human muscles could be classified into either population I (slow, type I) or population II (fast, type II) based on their force‐pCa(pSr) relations. The LPS muscle fibre which was unable to be classified into the two major fibre populations displayed a combination of the typical force‐pCa(pSr) relations for mammalian fast and slow muscle fibres. 4 Although fibres from the LPS, OO and VL muscles had similar differential sensitivities to Ca 2+ and Sr 2+ , the steepness of the force‐pCa(pSr) curves for fibres from the LPS and OO muscles were highly variable compared with those for fibres from the VL muscle. Specific forces (N cm −2 ) of the smaller diameter fibres from the LPS and OO muscles were significantly lower than those of fibres from the VL muscle. 5 The differences in the contractile activation characteristics between fibres from the VL muscle and those of fibres from facial (OO) muscles and extraocular (LPS) muscles, reflect the differences in their fibre composition that are responsible for their functional specificity.

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