The extensive length-force relationship of porcine airway smooth muscle.

J Appl Physiol (1985)

Krannert Institute of Cardiology, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USA.

Published: May 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study measured the functional length range of the trachealis muscle to find a specific reference length and evaluate how myofilaments change length.
  • The initial reference length (L(10%)) was determined where rest tension equaled 10% of the total force, with total force measured at this length serving as a benchmark.
  • Results showed that while active force remained mostly stable within a certain length range, significant changes in passive tension occurred at lengths greater than L(10%), indicating a complex interaction of structural changes in the muscle fibers.

Article Abstract

The full functional length range of trachealis muscle was measured to identify a precise reference length and to assess the length changes that the myofilament lattice can accommodate. The initial reference length (L(10%)) was that where rest tension equaled 10% of total force (passive tension plus active force). Total force at this length served as a force reference (F(ref) = 219 +/- 12 kPa, N = 7). Muscles initially adapted at L(10%) for 30-60 min had no rest tension when shortened to <0.9 L(10%). Passive tension rose steeply and linearly with slope 11.2 F(ref)/L(10%) at lengths >1.04 L(10%). Rest tension at 1.1 L(10%) declined by <10% over 1 h. The steep slope and stability of rest tension at long lengths suggest that a parameter of the slope could serve as a precise, reproducible reference length. Active force was nearly constant at lengths 0.33-1.0 L(10%) and declined steeply at lengths between 0.1 and 0.2 L(10%), extrapolating to zero at 0.076 L(10%). Muscles visibly reextended during relaxation at lengths <0.25 L(10%). At long lengths, force extrapolated to zero at 1.175 L(10%). The >15-fold length range (0.076-1.175 L(10%)) for force generation and nearly constant force over a greater than threefold length range is likely produced by several structural accommodations, including filament sliding, an increased number of sliding filaments in series, and increased length of passive structures in series with the sliding filaments. Visible reextension during relaxation suggests that the lattice does not undergo plastic adaptations at lengths <25% L(10%) and that lattice plasticity is limited to a three- to fourfold length range.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.01169.2006DOI Listing

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