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High temperature does not alter fatigability in intact mouse skeletal muscle fibres
Author(s) -
Place Nicolas,
Yamada Takashi,
Zhang ShiJin,
Westerblad Håkan,
Bruton Joseph D.
Publication year - 2009
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 - 10.1113/jphysiol.2009.176883
Subject(s) - muscle fatigue , skeletal muscle , contractility , in vivo , oxidative stress , soleus muscle , oxidative phosphorylation , chemistry , medicine , endocrinology , biophysics , biology , biochemistry , electromyography , physical medicine and rehabilitation , microbiology and biotechnology
Intense activation of skeletal muscle results in fatigue development, which involves impaired function of the muscle cells resulting in weaker and slower contractions. Intense muscle activity also results in increased heat production and muscle temperature may rise by up to ∼6°C. Hyperthermia is associated with impaired exercise performance in vivo and recent studies have shown contractile dysfunction and premature fatigue development in easily fatigued muscle fibres stimulated at high temperatures and these defects were attributed to oxidative stress. Here we studied whether fatigue‐resistant soleus fibres stimulated at increased temperature show premature fatigue development and whether increasing the level of oxidative stress accelerates fatigue development. Intact single fibres or small bundles of soleus fibres were fatigued by 600 ms tetani given at 2 s intervals at 37°C and 43°C, which is the highest temperature the muscle would experience in vivo . Tetanic force in the unfatigued state was not significantly different at the two temperatures. With 100 fatiguing tetani, force decreased by ∼15% at both temperatures; the free cytosolic [Ca 2+ ] (assessed with indo‐1) showed a similar ∼10% decrease at both temperatures. The oxidative stress during fatigue at 43°C was increased by application of 10 μ m hydrogen peroxide or tert‐butyl hydroperoxide and this did not cause premature fatigue development. In summary, fatigue‐resistant muscle fibres do not display impaired contractility and fatigue resistance at the highest temperature that mammals, including humans, would experience in vivo . Thus, intrinsic defects in fatigue‐resistant muscle fibres cannot explain the decreased physical performance at high temperatures.

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