1982
DOI: 10.1126/science.6977845
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Tonicity Effects on Intact Single Muscle Fibers: Relation Between Force and Cell Volume

Abstract: Contraction of isolated, intact frog muscle fibers under increasing tonicity of the external solution was studied by adding (i) effectively impermeant sodium chloride and sucrose and (ii) permeant potassium chloride. Force of isometric contraction decreased as a function of tonicity, independent of the permeability of the solute. In contrast, cell volume changed with tonicity in impermeant solutes and was constant with potassium chloride. The results are evidence that ionic strength in the sarcoplasm directly … Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…Although we observed a significant (-12%) increase in the diameter of fibers under rigor conditions (-7% in relaxing buffer) when the S-2 epitopes of the thick filament were saturated with anti-S-2 antibody, a similar force response also occurred when (rigor) fibers were treated with anti-S-2 Fab without a detectable change in the fiber diameter. In this connection, Gulati and Babu (17) [see also Edman and Reggiani (18) The simplest interpretation of the present results is that antibody binding to S-2 affects the ability of this segment to undergo a normal cross-bridge cycle. This might occur, for example, by altering the electrostatic charge along S-2 or by physically interfering with the bonding interactions between S-2 and neighboring regions of the thick-filament backbone.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 50%
“…Although we observed a significant (-12%) increase in the diameter of fibers under rigor conditions (-7% in relaxing buffer) when the S-2 epitopes of the thick filament were saturated with anti-S-2 antibody, a similar force response also occurred when (rigor) fibers were treated with anti-S-2 Fab without a detectable change in the fiber diameter. In this connection, Gulati and Babu (17) [see also Edman and Reggiani (18) The simplest interpretation of the present results is that antibody binding to S-2 affects the ability of this segment to undergo a normal cross-bridge cycle. This might occur, for example, by altering the electrostatic charge along S-2 or by physically interfering with the bonding interactions between S-2 and neighboring regions of the thick-filament backbone.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 50%
“…Decreasing myofilament lattice spacing beyond a certain point could interfere with normal crossbridge interaction and any contribution crossbridges might make to the activation of the thin filaments. This is indicated by the observations that fibre compression, with greater than 10% T-500, decreases maximal force (Gulati & Babu, 1982 and increases resting stiffness in intact and skinned fibres (Berman & Maughan, 1982;Goldman & Simmons, 1986;Umazume et al, 1986). These results, along with the decrease in pK oberved with osmotic compression at 3.4 ~m, suggest that there may be a critical lattice spacing below which myosin interaction with actin is altered, resulting in not only altered force, but a decrease in filament calcium sensitivity.…”
Section: The Effect Of Lattice Spacing Changes On Pkmentioning
confidence: 55%
“…This resultant increase in extracellular osmolarity is large and rapid and is known to result in shrinkage of erythrocytes [2,35] and non-contracting skeletal muscle [3]. It is well known that changes in skeletal muscle cell volume affect contractile function [36][37][38] and cellular metabolism [39,40], suggesting that it may be important for skeletal muscle cells to regulate cell volume.…”
Section: Role Of the Nkcc In Skeletal Muscle Cell Volume Regulationmentioning
confidence: 99%