Types of Skeletal Muscle
Skeletal muscle cells respond to stimulation with a brief maximal
contraction - they are of the
twitch type.
Individual muscles fibres cannot maintain their contraction over longer
periods. The sustained contraction of a muscle depends on the
"averaged" activity of often many muscles fibres, which individually
only contract for a brief period of time.
The force generated by the muscle fibre does depend on its state of contraction
at the time of excitation. Excitation frequency and the mechanical summation of
the force generated is one way to graduate the force generated by the entire
muscle. Another way is the regulation of the number of muscle fibres which
contract in the muscle. Additional
motor units,
i.e. groups of muscle fibres innervated by one motor neurone and its branches,
are recruited if their force is required. The functional properties of the
muscle can be "fine-tuned" further to the tasks the muscle performs
by blending functionally different types of muscle fibres:
Type I fibres (red fibres)
Red muscles contain predominantly (but not exclusively) red muscle cells. Red muscle fibres are
comparatively thin and contain large amounts of myoglobin and mitochondria. Red
fibres contain an isoform of myosin with low ATPase activity, i.e. the speed
with which myosin is able to use up ATP. Contraction is therefore slow. Red
muscles are used when sustained production of force is necessary, e.g. in the
control of posture.
Type
II fibres
White muscle cells,
which are predominantly found in white muscles, are thicker and contain less
myoglobin. ATPase activity of the myosin isoform in white fibres is high, and
contraction is fast. Type IIA fibres (red) contain many mitochondria and are
available for both sustained activity and short-lasting, intense
contractions. Type IIB/IIX fibres (white) contain only few mitochondria. They
are recruited in the case of rapid accelerations and short lasting maximal
contraction. Type IIB/IIX fibres rely on anaerobic glycolysis to generate the
ATP needed for contraction.
|
Skeletal muscle fibres do
not contract
spontaneously. Skeletal muscle fibres are
not
interconnected via GAP junctions but depend on nervous stimulation for
contraction.
All muscle fibres of a motor unit are of
the same type.
Fibre type is determined by the pattern of stimulation of
the fibre, which, in turn, is determined by the type of neuron which innervates
the muscle. If the stimulation pattern is changed experimentally, fibre type
will change accordingly. This is of some clinical / pathological importance.
Nerve fibres have the capacity to form new branches, i.e. to
"sprout", and to re-innervate muscle fibres, which may have lost
their innervation as a consequence of an acute lesion to the nerve or a
neurodegenerative disorder. The type of the muscle fibre will change if the
type of stimulation provided by the sprouting nerve fibre does not match with
the type of muscle. The process of reinnervation and type adjustment may result
in fibre type grouping within the muscle, i.e.
large areas of the muscle are populated by muscle fibres of one type.
Title:
Types of Skeletal Muscle
by:
om
at
2013-02-15T03:10:00+07:00
Rating: 4.8
of 5 Reviews
Types of Skeletal Muscle