Temperature effects on the kinetics of force generation in normal and dystrophic mouse muscles
- PMID: 4018206
- DOI: 10.1016/0014-4886(85)90095-0
Temperature effects on the kinetics of force generation in normal and dystrophic mouse muscles
Abstract
The kinetics of isolated extensor digitorum longus and soleus muscles from normal and genetically dystrophic (129/ReJ dy/dy) mice were studied at temperatures from 8 to 38 degrees C. The rate constants for the exponential rise of tetanic force and for the exponential decay of force during an isometric twitch or short tetanus were similar in normal and dystrophic soleus muscles, but the decay rates were significantly reduced in dystrophic extensor digitorum longus muscles. The temperature dependence for several rate constants for isometric twitches and tetani was similar in all muscles studied, suggesting that the same rate limiting processes apply to fast and slow, normal and dystrophic muscles. Thus, the contractile proteins and those in the sarcoplasmic reticulum of dystrophic muscle are probably normal. The slower relaxation phase in dystrophic extensor digitorum longus muscles is compatible with a reduction in Ca2+-pumping sites in the sarcoplasmic reticulum, perhaps secondary to a change in motor unit composition. Some changes in the temperature dependence for measured times, toward those of soleus muscles, is consistent with the increased proportion of slow twitch motor units in dystrophic extensor digitorum longus muscles.
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