Physiological and histochemical characteristics of motor units in cat tibialis anterior and extensor digitorum longus muscles

1980 ◽  
Vol 43 (6) ◽  
pp. 1615-1630 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. P. Dum ◽  
T. T. Kennedy

1. Intracellular recording and stimulation techniques were used to study the normal motor-unit population of tibialis anterior (TA) and extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles in the cat. Histochemical staining of the whole muscle and glycogen depletion of single motor units were performed. These results may be compared to those of their extensor antagonist, medial gastrocnemius (MG), as reported in studies by Burke and co-workers (7, 11, 13). 2. On the basis of two physiological properties, “sag” and fatigue resistance, the motor units in both TA and EDL could be classified into the same categories (types FF, F(int), FR, and S) as in MG (11). In contrast to MG, TA and EDL had nearly twice as many type-FR motor units and only half as many type-S motor units. 3. Glycogen depletion of representative single motor units of types FF and FR suggests a close correspondence between the physiological classification and a unique histochemical profile. No type-S units were depleted. 4. On the basis of histochemical staining, the muscle fibers in TA were presumed to belong to type-FF, -FR, or -S motor units. TA had a higher proportion of type-FR and a lower proportion of type-S muscle fibers than are found in MG. A striking feature was the variation in the proportion of each fiber type in different regions of TA. The anterolateral portion had mostly types FF and FR, while the posteriomedial portion had more types FR and S. 5. The twitch time to peak (TwTP) of isometric motor-unit contractions was generally quite fast with none having TwTP greater than 55 ms. The mean TwTP (not in EDL) and the mean tetanic tension of each motor-unit type were significantly different from each other. Most of the motor units exhibited significant postetanic potentiation of twitch tension and a corresponding lengthening of half-relaxation time and to a lesser degree, twitch contraction time. 6. There was a significant relationship between the inverse of motoneuronal input resistance and either tetanic tension or twitch contraction time. These relationships were not apparent when axonal conduction velocity rather than input resistance was used as an index of motoneuron size. The mean input resistances of the three major motor-unit types were significantly different while the mean conduction velocities of types FF and FR were nearly identical. A weak positive correlation was observed between the TwTP and the afterhyperpolarization of TA and EDL motoneurons. 7. In general, the mechanical characteristics and intrinsic motoneuronal properties of TA and EDL appear to parallel the organization of their extensor antagonist, MG, with some important quantitative differences that may reflect their different functional roles.

1995 ◽  
Vol 268 (2) ◽  
pp. C527-C534 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. A. Unguez ◽  
R. R. Roy ◽  
D. J. Pierotti ◽  
S. Bodine-Fowler ◽  
V. R. Edgerton

To examine the influence of a motoneuron in maintaining the phenotype of the muscle fibers it innervates, myosin heavy chain (MHC) expression, succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) activity, and cross-sectional area (CSA) of a sample of fibers belonging to a motor unit were studied in the cat tibialis anterior 6 mo after the nerve branches innervating the anterior compartment were cut and sutured near the point of entry into the muscle. The mean, range, and coefficient of variation for the SDH activity and the CSA for both motor unit and non-motor unit fibers for each MHC profile and from each control and each self-reinnervated muscle studied was obtained. Eight motor units were isolated from self-reinnervated muscles using standard ventral root filament testing techniques, tested physiologically, and compared with four motor units from control muscles. Motor units from self-reinnervated muscles could be classified into the same physiological types as those found in control tibialis anterior muscles. The muscle fibers belonging to a unit were depleted of glycogen via repetitive stimulation and identified in periodic acid-Schiff-stained frozen sections. Whereas muscle fibers in control units expressed similar MHCs, each motor unit from self-reinnervated muscles contained a mixture of fiber types. In each motor unit, however, there was a predominance of fibers with the same MHC profile. The relative differences in the mean SDH activities found among fibers of different MHC profiles within a unit after self-reinnervation and those found among fibers in control muscles were similar, i.e., fast-2 < fast-1 < or = slow MHC fibers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


1986 ◽  
Vol 250 (6) ◽  
pp. C828-C833 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Cote ◽  
J. A. Faulkner

Extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles of rats were grafted with the nerves intact. Sixty days after grafting, single motor units were isolated and characterized in terms of fatigability and morphology. The distribution of fatigue indexes for motor units in control muscles revealed two main peaks, whereas in grafts no clear peaks were observed, fatigue indexes being distributed more evenly over the entire range. This difference in the distribution of fatigue indexes of motor units may explain the increased resistance to fatigue observed for whole grafts compared with whole EDL muscles. An inverse linear relationship was found between maximum tetanic tensions and the fatigue indexes of motor units from control and grafted EDL muscles. The distribution of fiber areas for single motor units was broader in grafts than in control EDL muscles, but the mean innervation ratio was not different. In approximately 20% of the units mapped in grafts, fibers were clustered tightly within a small portion of the total cross section, suggesting axonal sprouting during regeneration.


1998 ◽  
Vol 76 (1) ◽  
pp. 68-71
Author(s):  
D M Zardini ◽  
D J Parry

Physiological, histochemical, and morphometric properties of fast-twitch single motor units were studied in mouse extensor digitorum longus muscles in an in vitro ventral root - nerve - muscle preparation. Single motor units were functionally isolated by microdissection of the ventral root, and the glycogen depletion technique was used to demonstrate the component muscle fibers. Monoclonal antibodies were used to identify their myosin heavy chain composition. The technique allows one to correlate physiological characteristics of single motor units with fiber type but is less useful for morphological assessment of motor unit size as a result of failure to deplete glycogen from all fibers of motor units containing fibers with high oxidative capacity.Key words: fiber type, IIx motor units, fatigue index, glycogen depletion.


1999 ◽  
Vol 82 (2) ◽  
pp. 584-592 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas G. Sutlive ◽  
J. Ross McClung ◽  
Stephen J. Goldberg

Investigations of whole muscle and motor-unit contractile properties have provided valuable information for our understanding of the spinal cord and extraocular motor systems. However, no previous investigation has examined these properties in an isolated tongue muscle. The purpose of this study was to determine the contractile properties and muscle fiber types of the rat styloglossus muscle. The styloglossus is one of three extrinsic tongue muscles and serves to retract the tongue within the oral cavity. Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats ( n = 19) were used in these experiments. The contractile characteristics of the whole styloglossus muscle ( n = 9) were measured in response to stimulation of the hypoglossal nerve branch to the muscle. The average twitch tension produced was 3.30 g with a mean twitch contraction time of 13.81 ms. The mean maximum tetanic tension was 19.66 g and occurred at or near the fusion frequency, which averaged 109 Hz. The styloglossus muscle was resistant to fatigue [fatigue index (F. I.) = 0.76]. In separate experiments ( n = 7), the contractile characteristics of 37 single motor units were measured in response to extracellular stimulation of hypoglossal motoneurons. The twitch tension generated by styloglossus motor units averaged 35.7 mg, and the mean twitch contraction time was 12.46 ms. The mean fusion frequency was 92 Hz. Maximum tetanic tension averaged 177.8 mg. Styloglossus single motor units were resistant to fatigue (F. I. = 0.74). The sites of stimulation that yielded a contractile response in the styloglossus muscle were consistent with the location of the styloglossus motoneuron pool reported in earlier anatomy studies. Muscle fiber typing was determined in three animals based on the myofibrillar ATPase reaction at pH 9.8, 4.6, and 4.3. The styloglossus muscle was composed of ≈99% type IIA fibers with a few scattered type I fibers present in the study sample. On the basis of the combined findings of the physiology and histochemistry experiments, the styloglossus muscle appeared to be a homogeneous muscle composed almost exclusively of fast, fatigue-resistant motor units. These properties of the styloglossus muscle and its motor units were compared with findings in other rat skeletal muscles.


1978 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 496-508 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. V. Walsh ◽  
R. E. Burke ◽  
W. Z. Rymer ◽  
P. Tsairis

1. Compensatory hypertrophy of the medial gastrocnemius (MG) muscle was produced by denervating or removing its synergists (i.e., the lateral gastrocnemius, soleus, and plantaris muscles) in adult cats. Following survival times of 14-32 wk, intracellular recording and stimulation techniques were used to study the motor-unit population in MG. The data obtained were compared with results from MG motor units in normal unoperated cats of the same body size and weight. 2. Using criteria employed for normal motor units, the units in hypertrophic MG muscles were readily classified into the same groups (types FF, F(int), FR, and S) as in normal MG. There was no detectable difference in the distribution of motor-unit types after hypertrophy. 3. When compared with a normal motor-unit sample, there was a large increase in mean tetanic tension, but no significant change in twitch tension, for each motor-unit type in the hypertrophied muscles. The most marked increase was found among the fatigue-resistant type S and type FR motor units. There was no alteration of twitch contraction times or fatigue resistance in any unit type after hypertrophy. 4. For each motor-unit type, the mean homonymous (MG) group Ia EPSP amplitude was the same in normal and hypertrophic MG populations. There was, however, a significant increase in the average conduction velocity of MG motor axons in the animals with uncomplicated MG synergist removal and maximal MG hypertrophy. 5. On the basis of histochemical staining, muscle fibers from comparable sections of hypertrophic and contralateral (unoperated) MG muscles were presumptively identified as belonging to FF, FR, or S units. There was no significant difference between hypertrophic and contralateral MG muscles in the percentage of each fiber type, although there was some variability in muscle composition from one cat to another. One muscle pair was studied in detail for fiber cross-sectional area. In this cat, with marked hypertrophy by muscle weight, there was a modest increase in the mean fiber areas of histochemical S and FR muscle fibers, but no evident change in FF fibers, on the hypertrophic side. 6. MG motor units were examined in several cats in which synergist removal resulted in scarring and marked limitation of passive ankle mobility, and no evident weight gain in MG. Motor units of all types in these animals showed a decrease in twitch tension and in mean twitch/tetanus ratios, with little alteration in mean tetanic tensions. 7. The main effect of compensatory hypertrophy under the present conditions was a large increase in tetanic tension output from individual motor units due, at least in part, to an increase in fiber cross-sectional area. There was no evidence indicating any "conversion" of motor units or of their muscle fibers from one type to another.


1989 ◽  
Vol 67 (2) ◽  
pp. 620-627 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. G. Enad ◽  
M. Fournier ◽  
G. C. Sieck

Motor units in the cat diaphragm (DIA) were isolated in situ by microdissection and stimulation of C5 ventral root filaments. Motor units were classified based on their isometric contractile force responses and fatigue indexes (FI). The muscle fibers belonging to individual units (i.e., the muscle unit) were identified using the glycogen-depletion method. Fibers were classified as type I or II based on histochemical staining for myofibrillar adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) after alkaline preincubation. The rate of succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) activity of each fiber was determined using a microphotometric procedure. The location of capillaries was determined from muscle cross sections stained for ATPase after acid (pH = 4.2) preincubation. The capillarity of muscle unit fibers was determined by counting the number of capillaries surrounding fibers and by calculating the number of capillaries per fiber area. A significant correlation was found between the fatigue resistance of DIA units and the mean SDH activity of muscle unit fibers. A significant correlation was also observed between DIA unit fatigue resistance and both indexes of muscle unit fiber capillarity. The mean SDH activity and mean capillary density of muscle unit fibers were also correlated. We conclude that DIA motor unit fatigue resistance depends, at least in part, on the oxidative capacity and capillary density of muscle unit fibers.


1993 ◽  
Vol 69 (2) ◽  
pp. 442-448 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Petit ◽  
M. Chua ◽  
C. C. Hunt

1. Isotonic shortening of cat superficial lumbrical muscles was studied during maximal tetanic contractions of single motor units of identified types. For each motor unit, the maximal speed of contraction, Vmax, was determined by extrapolating to zero the hyperbolic relation between applied tension and speed of shortening. 2. The maximal speeds of shortening of motor units formed a continuum with the highest velocities observed for the fast fatigable motor units and the lowest for the slow motor units. 3. On average, the maximum speed of shortening increased with the tetanic tension developed by the motor units. 4. In motor units with isometric twitch contraction times less than 35 ms, these times showed a significant inverse correlation with Vmax. Progressively longer contraction times were associated with rather small changes in Vmax. 5. The implications of these findings on the speed of muscle shortening during motor-unit recruitment are discussed.


2014 ◽  
Vol 112 (7) ◽  
pp. 1685-1691 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher J. Dakin ◽  
Brian H. Dalton ◽  
Billy L. Luu ◽  
Jean-Sébastien Blouin

Rectification of surface electromyographic (EMG) recordings prior to their correlation with other signals is a widely used form of preprocessing. Recently this practice has come into question, elevating the subject of EMG rectification to a topic of much debate. Proponents for rectifying suggest it accentuates the EMG spike timing information, whereas opponents indicate it is unnecessary and its nonlinear distortion of data is potentially destructive. Here we examine the necessity of rectification on the extraction of muscle responses, but for the first time using a known oscillatory input to the muscle in the form of electrical vestibular stimulation. Participants were exposed to sinusoidal vestibular stimuli while surface and intramuscular EMG were recorded from the left medial gastrocnemius. We compared the unrectified and rectified surface EMG to single motor units to determine which method best identified stimulus-EMG coherence and phase at the single-motor unit level. Surface EMG modulation at the stimulus frequency was obvious in the unrectified surface EMG. However, this modulation was not identified by the fast Fourier transform, and therefore stimulus coherence with the unrectified EMG signal failed to capture this covariance. Both the rectified surface EMG and single motor units displayed significant coherence over the entire stimulus bandwidth (1–20 Hz). Furthermore, the stimulus-phase relationship for the rectified EMG and motor units shared a moderate correlation ( r = 0.56). These data indicate that rectification of surface EMG is a necessary step to extract EMG envelope modulation due to motor unit entrainment to a known stimulus.


1987 ◽  
Vol 57 (4) ◽  
pp. 1227-1245 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. C. Foehring ◽  
G. W. Sypert ◽  
J. B. Munson

We tested whether the muscle innervated may influence the expression of motoneuron electrical properties. Properties of individual motor units were examined following cross-reinnervation (X-reinnervation) of cat lateral gastrocnemius (LG) and soleus muscles by the medial gastrocnemius (MG) nerve. We examined animals at two postoperative times: 9-10 wk (medX) and 9-11 mo (longX). For comparison, normal LG and soleus motoneuron properties were also studied. Motor units were classified on the basis of their contractile responses as fast contracting fatigable, fast intermediate fast contracting fatigue resistant, and slow types FF, FI, FR, or S, respectively) (9, 21). Motoneuron electrical properties (rheobase, input resistance, axonal conduction velocity, afterhyperpolarization) were measured. After 9-11 mo, MG motoneurons that innervated LG muscle showed recovery of electrical properties similar to self-regenerated MG motoneurons. The relationships between motoneuron electrical properties were largely similar to self-regenerated MG. For MG motoneurons that innervated LG, motoneuron type (65) predicted motor-unit type in 74% of cases. LongX-soleus motoneurons differed from longX-LG motoneurons or self-regenerated MG motoneurons in mean values for motoneuron electrical properties. The differences in overall means reflected the predominance of type S motor units. The relationships between motoneuron electrical properties were also different than in self-regenerated MG motoneurons. In all cases, the alterations were in the direction of properties of type S units, and the relationship between normal soleus motoneurons and their muscle units. Within motor-unit types, the mean values were typical for that type in self-regenerated MG. Motoneuron type (65) was a fairly strong predictor of motor-unit type in longX soleus. MG motoneurons that innervated soleus displayed altered values for axonal conduction velocity, rheobase, and input resistance, which could indicate incomplete recovery from the axotomized state. However, although mean afterhyperpolarization (AHP) half-decay time was unaltered by axotomy (25), this parameter was significantly lengthened in MG motoneurons that innervated soleus muscle. There were, however, individual motoneuron-muscle-unit mismatches, which suggested that longer mean AHP half-decay time may also be due to incomplete recovery of a subpopulation of motoneurons. Those MG motoneurons able to specify soleus muscle-fiber type exhibited motoneuron electrical properties typical of that same motoneuron type in self-regenerated MG.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


1991 ◽  
Vol 66 (6) ◽  
pp. 1838-1846 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. K. Powers ◽  
M. D. Binder

1. The tension produced by the combined stimulation of two to four single motor units of the cat tibialis posterior muscle was compared with the algebraic sum of the tensions produced by each individual motor unit. Comparisons were made under isometric conditions and during imposed changes in muscle length. 2. Under isometric conditions, the tension resulting from combined stimulation of units displayed marked nonlinear summation, as previously reported in other cat hindlimb muscles. On average, the measured tension was approximately 20% greater than the algebraic sum of the individual unit tensions. However, small trapezoidal movements imposed on the muscle during stimulation significantly reduced the degree of nonlinear summation both during and after the movement. This effect was seen with imposed movements as small as 50 microns. 3. The degree of nonlinear summation was not dependent on motor unit size or on stimulus frequency. The effect was also unrelated to tendon compliance because the degree of nonlinear summation of motor unit forces was unaffected by the inclusion of different amounts of the external tendon between the muscle and the force transducer. 4. Our results support previous suggestions that the force measured when individual motor units are stimulated under isometric conditions is reduced by friction between the active muscle fibers and adjacent passive fibers. These frictional effects are likely to originate in the connective tissue matrix connecting adjacent muscle fibers. However, because these effects are virtually eliminated by small movements, linear summation of motor unit tensions should occur at low force levels under nonisometric conditions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


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