Millisecond Time-Resolved Changes in X-Ray Reflections from Contracting Muscle during Rapid Mechanical Transients, Recorded Using Synchrotron Radiation

Low-angle x-ray diffraction diagrams have been recorded from frog sartorius muscles by using synchrotron radiation as a high-intensity x-ray source. This has enabled changes in some of the principal reflections of interest to be followed with a time resolution of 1 ms, during small but very rapid le...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 1981-04, Vol.78 (4), p.2297-2301
Hauptverfasser: Huxley, H. E., Simmons, R. M., Faruqi, A. R., Kress, M., Bordas, J., Koch, M. H. J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Low-angle x-ray diffraction diagrams have been recorded from frog sartorius muscles by using synchrotron radiation as a high-intensity x-ray source. This has enabled changes in some of the principal reflections of interest to be followed with a time resolution of 1 ms, during small but very rapid length changes imposed on a contracting muscle. The 143- angstrom meridional reflection, which is believed to arise from a repeating pattern of myosin cross-bridges along the length of the muscle, shows large changes in intensity in these circumstances. During both rapid releases and rapid stretches, by amounts that produce a translation of actin and myosin filaments past each other by about 100 angstrom and that are completed in about a millisecond (i.e., before significant cross-bridge detachment would be expected), an almost synchronous decrease in 143- angstrom intensity occurs, by 50% or more. This is followed, in the case of quick releases, by a rapid partial recovery of intensity lasting 5-6 ms (which may represent cross-bridge release and reattachment) and then by a more gradual return to the normal isometric value. Quick stretches show only the slower return of intensity. Immediately after the length change, the initial drop in 143- angstrom intensity can be reversed if the release (or stretch) is reversed. These changes provide evidence of a more direct kind than has hitherto been available that the active sliding of actin filaments past myosin filaments during contraction is produced by longitudinal movement of attached cross-bridges.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.78.4.2297