Can J Physiol Pharmacol
July 2007
It has been reported that sensitization of animals to allergens increases both early shortening velocity and myosin light-chain kinase of their airway smooth muscle without increasing force generated by these muscles. Since early shortening sets muscle length for the duration of a contraction, these responses might be expected to produce greater airway obstruction. Here, it is explained how the more rapid early shortening without increased force production is predicted by the 2-stage process of activation followed by contraction posited by the crossbridge theory of contraction when the rate, but not the extent, of activation is increased.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMuscle birefringence, caused mainly by parallel thick filaments, increases in smooth muscle during stimulation, signalling thick filament formation upon activation. The reverse occurs in skeletal muscle, where a decrease in birefringence has been correlated with crossbridge movement away from the thick filaments. When force generation by trachealis muscle was inhibited with wortmannin, which inhibits myosin light-chain phosphorylation and thick-filament formation, but not the calcium increase caused by stimulation, the birefringence response inverted, suggesting crossbridge movement similar to that of skeletal muscle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol
December 2005
Birefringence and force produced by pig tracheal smooth muscles were recorded every 100 ms during electrically stimulated tetani at muscle lengths that varied 1.5-fold and at the peak of acetylcholine contractures at the same lengths. Isometric force was nearly the same at all lengths.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe observation that the length-force relationship in airway smooth muscle can be shifted along the length axis by accommodating the muscle at different lengths has stimulated great interest. In light of the recent understanding of the dynamic nature of length-force relationship, many of our concepts regarding smooth muscle mechanical properties, including the notion that the muscle possesses a unique optimal length that correlates to maximal force generation, are likely to be incorrect. To facilitate accurate and efficient communication among scientists interested in the function of airway smooth muscle, a revised and collectively accepted nomenclature describing the adaptive and dynamic nature of the length-force relationship will be invaluable.
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