The Contribution of the Elastic Reaction is Severely Underestimated in Studies on Myofibril Contraction

We have considered the Huxley-Simmons manoeuvre. On the assumption that the quick release is an elastic process and on the basis of the isometric tension and of the stiffness of the muscle fibre we calculated that the spontaneous release of the fibre requires ~43 μs, which is much faster than the ob...

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Main Authors: Sara Pozzati, Enrico Grazi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2009-03-01
Series:International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/10/3/942/
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spelling doaj-de2d055847654494a9bf4e9c6ead9a3a2020-11-24T21:55:12ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences1422-00672009-03-0110394295310.3390/ijms10030942The Contribution of the Elastic Reaction is Severely Underestimated in Studies on Myofibril ContractionSara PozzatiEnrico GraziWe have considered the Huxley-Simmons manoeuvre. On the assumption that the quick release is an elastic process and on the basis of the isometric tension and of the stiffness of the muscle fibre we calculated that the spontaneous release of the fibre requires ~43 μs, which is much faster than the observed release, ~180 μs. We concluded that the observed quick release is a guided process. After proper selection of the mass and of the stiffness of the system we mimicked the early recovery and noticed that most of the energy required to accomplish the early recovery is supplied by the kinetic energy accumulated during the course of the quick release. We computed that the frequency of the working strokes in the half sarcomere was between 4×106 and 40×106 s-1. This is not to say that the ATPase rate constants are accumulative but only that the overall frequency of the working strokes in the half saromere is many orders of magnitude faster than the average ATPase rate constant. With this frequency no part of the Huxley-Simmons manoeuvre, quick release included, escapes the control of the working stroke. This means also that there is no reason to take the early recovery as an indication of the length of the working stroke. http://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/10/3/942/HuxleySimmonsmanoeuvreelastic reactionmyofibrils contraction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sara Pozzati
Enrico Grazi
spellingShingle Sara Pozzati
Enrico Grazi
The Contribution of the Elastic Reaction is Severely Underestimated in Studies on Myofibril Contraction
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Huxley
Simmons
manoeuvre
elastic reaction
myofibrils contraction
author_facet Sara Pozzati
Enrico Grazi
author_sort Sara Pozzati
title The Contribution of the Elastic Reaction is Severely Underestimated in Studies on Myofibril Contraction
title_short The Contribution of the Elastic Reaction is Severely Underestimated in Studies on Myofibril Contraction
title_full The Contribution of the Elastic Reaction is Severely Underestimated in Studies on Myofibril Contraction
title_fullStr The Contribution of the Elastic Reaction is Severely Underestimated in Studies on Myofibril Contraction
title_full_unstemmed The Contribution of the Elastic Reaction is Severely Underestimated in Studies on Myofibril Contraction
title_sort contribution of the elastic reaction is severely underestimated in studies on myofibril contraction
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Molecular Sciences
issn 1422-0067
publishDate 2009-03-01
description We have considered the Huxley-Simmons manoeuvre. On the assumption that the quick release is an elastic process and on the basis of the isometric tension and of the stiffness of the muscle fibre we calculated that the spontaneous release of the fibre requires ~43 μs, which is much faster than the observed release, ~180 μs. We concluded that the observed quick release is a guided process. After proper selection of the mass and of the stiffness of the system we mimicked the early recovery and noticed that most of the energy required to accomplish the early recovery is supplied by the kinetic energy accumulated during the course of the quick release. We computed that the frequency of the working strokes in the half sarcomere was between 4×106 and 40×106 s-1. This is not to say that the ATPase rate constants are accumulative but only that the overall frequency of the working strokes in the half saromere is many orders of magnitude faster than the average ATPase rate constant. With this frequency no part of the Huxley-Simmons manoeuvre, quick release included, escapes the control of the working stroke. This means also that there is no reason to take the early recovery as an indication of the length of the working stroke.
topic Huxley
Simmons
manoeuvre
elastic reaction
myofibrils contraction
url http://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/10/3/942/
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