Neuromuscular organization of avian flight muscle: Morphology and contractile properties of motor units in the pectoralis (pars thoracicus) of pigeon (Columba livia)
β Scribed by A.J. Sokoloff; J.M. Ryan; E. Valerie; D.S. Wilson; G.E. Goslow JR.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 731 KB
- Volume
- 236
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0362-2525
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β¦ Synopsis
We used acid digestion and glycogen depletion to determine fascicle organization, fiber morphology, and physiological and anatomical features of individual motor units of an in-series muscle, the pectoralis (pars thoracicus) of the pigeon (Columba livia). Most fascicles are attached at one end to connective tissue. Average fiber length in the four regions examined range from 42% to 66% of average fascicle length. More than 65% of fibers are blunt at one end of a fascicle and taper intrafascicularly. Fibers with bluntblunt endings range from 13% to 31% of the population in different regions; taper-taper fibers range from 2% to 17%. Pigeon pectoralis fibers are distinguished histochemically into fast-twitch glycolytic (FG) and fast-twitch oxidative-glycolytic (FOG) populations. Three units composed of FG fibers (FG units) contract more quickly than three units composed of FOG fibers (FOG units) (range 31-37 vs 47-62 msec), produce more tetanic force (0.11-0.32 vs 0.02-0.05 N) and are more fatigable (Ο½18% initial force vs ΟΎ50% after repeated stimulation). Most motor units are confined to one of the four muscle regions. Territory of two FOG units is Ο½30% of parent fascicle length. Territories of other units spanned parent fascicles; most fibers in these units do not extend the full fascicle length. Compared to FG units, FOG units have lower maximum innervation ratios and density indices (ratio of depleted/total FOG fibers in territory 8-14% vs 58-76% for FG units). These differences support the hypothesis that FG units are organized to produce substantial force and power for takeoff, landing and other ballistic movements whereas FOG units are suited for sustained flight when power requirements are reduced. Implications of findings for understanding the control of in-series muscles and the use of connective tissue elastic elements during wing movements are discussed.
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