Myosin cross-bridge kinetics slow at longer muscle lengths during isometric contractions in intact soleus from mice

Abstract

Muscle contraction results from force-generating cross-bridge interactions between myosin and actin. Cross-bridge cycling kinetics underlie fundamental contractile properties, such as active force production and energy utilization. Factors that influence cross-bridge kinetics at the molecular level propagate through the sarcomeres, cells and tissue to modulate whole-muscle function. Conversely, movement and changes in the muscle length can influence cross-bridge kinetics on the molecular level. Reduced, single-molecule and single-fibre experiments have shown that increasing the strain on cross-bridges may slow their cycling rate and prolong their attachment duration. However, whether these strain-dependent cycling mechanisms persist in the intact muscle tissue, which encompasses more complex organization and passive elements, remains unclear. To investigate this multi-scale relationship, we adapted traditional step-stretch protocols for use with mouse soleus muscle during isometric tetanic contractions, enabling novel estimates of length-dependent cross-bridge kinetics in the intact skeletal muscle. Compared to rates at the optimal muscle length ( L o ), we found that cross-bridge detachment rates increased by approximately 20% at 90% of L o (shorter) and decreased by approximately 20% at 110% of L o (longer). These data indicate that cross-bridge kinetics vary with whole-muscle length during intact, isometric contraction, which could intrinsically modulate force generation and energetics, and suggests a multi-scale feedback pathway between whole-muscle function and cross-bridge activity.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
May 12, 2021
Source ID
10.1098/rspb.2020.2895

Entities

People

  • Axel J. Fenwick
  • Bertrand C.W. Tanner
  • David C Lin

Organizations

  • American Heart Association
  • Army Research Office
  • National Science Foundation
  • Washington State University

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Biology

Readers

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