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Query: EC:3.6.4.1 (
myosin ATPase
)
1,140
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Activity levels of
succinate dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) were determined kinetically by means of comparative microphotometric measurements in situ. Activities were correlated with fibre types classified histochemically according to Brooke and Kaiser (1970). Analyses of tibialis anterior muscles in the mouse, rat, guinea pig, rabbit, cat and the human showed pronounced variations in the activity profiles of type I, type IIA and IIB fibres of these muscles. Large scattering of enzyme activity existed in three fibre populations. Overlaps of varying extent were found for the
SDH
profiles between the different muscles. Type I fibres reveal species differences in aerobic oxidative capacity. Whereas the majority of the IIB fibres in rabbit muscle tended to be low in
SDH
activity, the main fraction of this fibre population was characterized by high activities in mouse muscle. Similarly, the IIA fibre populations revealed opposite properties in mouse and rabbit muscles. These extremes as well as intermediate activity patterns indicate that no general scheme exists according to which the histochemically assessable
myosin ATPase
is correlated with the aerobic oxidative capacity of muscle fibres in various mammalian muscles.
...
PMID:A comparative microphotometric study of succinate dehydrogenase activity levels in type I, IIA and IIB fibres of mammalian and human muscles. 708 48
Muscle fibre compositions of five different rabbit muscles were determined by combining two enzyme-histochemical reactions (NADH tetracolium oxidoreductase and
myosin ATPase
after alkaline preincubation). The differentiation into the fibre types, fast twitch glycolytic (FTG), fast twitch oxidative (FTO), and slow twitch oxidative (STO) was possible by a reliable staining classification. Aim of the study was the estimation of enzyme activity patterns within the three different fibre types. For this purpose, four serial cross-sections with several enzyme histochemical reactions were performed: alkaline combination method for fibre type determination, the reactions of
myosin ATPase
, alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (GPDH), and
succinate dehydrogenase
(
SDH
). The measurement procedure for the estimation of enzyme activities was based on the proportionality between the intensity of the enzyme histochemical staining reaction and the degree of enzyme activity. The activities of GPDH (indicator for glycolytic metabolism) and
SDH
(oxidative metabolism) were inverse. The calcium-activated
myosin ATPase
showed only little activity in slow twitch fibres after alkaline preincubation. In contrast to slow twitch fibres, ATPase activity in fast twitch fibres was relatively high. The results showed that the classification of muscle fibre types due to their
myosin ATPase
activities and their main metabolisms (oxidative and glycolytic respectively) is justified.
...
PMID:Enzyme activity patterns of myosin ATPase, alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase and succinate dehydrogenase within different muscle fibre types. 797 31
To study the aging of muscle fibres in red skeletal muscle, fibre number, fibre diameter and fibre type composition in the soleus muscle of male rats of 3, 12 and 24 months old were examined. The total number of muscle fibres remained unchanged, while average diameter increased slightly with increasing age. The staining intensity of myosin adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activity in the fibres decreased with advancing age. Therefore, observation on the basis of
myosin ATPase
histochemistry alone is not adequate to study the aging of muscle fibres. In the muscles of 24 month-old animals, four fibre types were recognized; 1) many (52%) type I-O fibres showing weak ATPase and
succinate dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) reactions with slight subsarcolemmal aggregates of diformazan (SAD); 2) some (33%) type M fibres showing weak ATPase and intense
SDH
reactions with marked SAD; 3) a few (12%) type O fibres showing weak ATPase and intense
SDH
reactions without SAD; and 4) very few (4%) type IIA fibres. Histochemical and morphometric results suggest that type I-O, type M and type O fibres are derived from type I, type I and type IIA fibres, respectively. Furthermore, no transitional fibres from type IIA to type I were observed. Therefore, age-related changes in fibre type composition in the muscle cannot be explained by the simple idea that most type IIA fibres are transformed into type I fibres.
...
PMID:Age-related changes in fibre number, fibre size, fibre type composition and adenosine triphosphatase activity in rat soleus muscle. 797 39
In this study enzyme activities and lectin binding patterns in skeletal muscle from very old rats were investigated in order to evaluate changes in enzyme activity or carbohydrate expression in senile muscle. Activities for adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase),
succinic dehydrogenase
, non-specific esterase and the binding pattern for 31 lectins were investigated in the soleus muscles from very old (36 months) and young (3 months) rats. In ageing muscles atrophic, angulated muscle fibres are frequent. In cryostat sections these fibres were mostly but not always type II defined by the
myosin ATPase
reaction; few showed a strong esterase activity. Some showed strong activity for
succinic dehydrogenase
while others were weakly reacting. A number of lectins strongly bound to the sarcoplasm in angulated fibres while the binding to normal fibres in both old and young rat muscle was much weaker or even absent. Preferential binding to the ageing, angulated fibres was seen with Aleuria aurentia, Galantus nivalis, Caragana abborecens, Triticum vulgaris, Maackia amurensis, Sambucus nigra, Phaseolus vulgaris erythroagglutinin, and Phaseolus coccineus. Samples of homogenized and centrifuged muscles were run by electrophoresis and the gels blotted to nitrocellulose paper. Subsequent lectin staining of the blots detected that two glycoproteins with molecular weights around 25,000 and 21,000 daltons were present in old muscle, but not in young. Aberrant or elevated expression of sarcoplasmic glycoconjugates is involved in ageing muscle atrophy.
...
PMID:Glycosylation pattern and enzyme activities in atrophic, angulated skeletal muscle fibres from ageing rats. 818 92
Male frogs use their forelimb flexor muscles to clasp females during the mating behavior known as amplexus. We investigated the effects of testosterone on a principal forelimb flexor, the flexor carpi radialis muscle (FCR), using morphological and histochemical techniques. Male Xenopus laevis were surgically manipulated to produce high or low levels of circulating testosterone for an 8-week period. After this treatment, measurement of fibers in muscle cross-sections revealed that average fiber size was positively correlated with testosterone level. This effect was not the same for all muscle fibers, however. Fibers in the shoulder region were more sensitive to testosterone than fibers in other regions of the muscle. Histochemical staining of cross-sections showed that the patterns of staining for
myosin ATPase
or
succinic dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) were not influenced by testosterone levels, but total
SDH
activity was increased by testosterone treatment. When sensitivity to testosterone was correlated with ATPase activity, fibers with high ATPase activity were found to be more sensitive to testosterone than fibers with low activity, regardless of position within the muscle. Most fibers with high ATPase activity were located in the shoulder region of the muscle. These fibers are innervated by different motor axons than are fibers in the elbow region of the muscle, and contractions of shoulder (but not elbow) region fibers, elicited by stimulation of motor axons, are slowed by testosterone treatment (Regnier and Herrera, 1993, J. Physiol. 461:565-581).
...
PMID:Differential sensitivity to androgens within a sexually dimorphic muscle of male frogs (Xenopus laevis). 840 79
The distribution of collagen fibers of rat masticatory muscles during the postnatal period (two weeks), was investigated by electrophoresis and immunohistochemistry. At these stages, the myosin of rat masticatory muscles displays specific electrophoretic patterns. Comparison of the myosin patterns of these muscles allows their identification. 1) Analysis by SDS-PAGE indicated that one of three weakly reactive stainable proteins with lower mobility than the heavy chain of myosin disappeared from the temporal muscle on day 13, as compared with other masticatory muscles. However, in histochemical analysis of the muscle fibers, the reaction specific for
succinic dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) activity was strong, and the fibers on day 13 could be classified into two types with respect to
SDH
activity. By contrast, on day 0, the fibers were classified into two types with respect to
myosin ATPase
activity. 2) Immunohistochemical analysis indicated that the distribution of the components of the extracellular matrix in the epimysium (type I collagen), perimysium (type I collagen, fibronectin, and laminin) and endomysium (type III collagen, fibronectin, laminin, and tenascin) was related to the metabolic capacity on days 12 to 13. The variability in the types of myosin and in proteins of the extracellular matrix might be important during the development of rat masticatory muscles.
...
PMID:Distribution of the macromolecular components of masticatory muscles during differentiation of the muscle fibers in the postnatal rat. 857 Jan 40
The superior rectus muscle fibers of marlins, swordfish, sailfish and spearfish are modified for heat production at the expense of contractile ability. Although 'heater cells' are a muscle derivative (Block, 1986, 1991), the myoblast origin and developmental pathway of these thermogenic cells is unknown. To gain insight into heater cell origins, we characterized blue marlin superior rectus muscle and its heater tissue derivative with histochemical and immunological techniques. We specifically employed
myosin ATPase
and
succinate dehydrogenase
histochemical assays, and myosin heavy chain immunohistochemistry. Results revealed that marlin superior rectus muscles contain at least six distinct fiber types, and suggested the presence of both twitch and tonic fibers. Immunological results indicate that myosin is present within the thermogenic cells but not in myofibrillar lattices. The antibodies that recognized myosin in heater cells also labeled myosin in the twitch fibers of swimming muscle. In contrast, antibodies that labeled histologically defined tonic fibers did not label heater cells. These results suggest that heater cells and twitch fibers express the same myosin isoform, and establish a phenotypic connection between heater cells and twitch fibers. This conclusion is discussed in the context of the muscle-to-heater trajectory and the muscle fiber-type origin of heater cells.
...
PMID:Histochemical and immunohistochemical studies on the origin of the blue marlin heater cell phenotype. 946 27
The muscle fiber composition and cross-sectional area of muscle fiber types were investigated histochemically in the abdominal muscles (rectus abdominis muscle, obliquus externus abdominis muscle, obliquus internus abdominis muscle and transversus abdominis muscle) of three Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata). Muscle fibers were classified into three fiber types (Type I, II A and II B) by
myosin ATPase
activity and
succinate dehydrogenase
activity. Each abdominal muscle in Japanese macaques contained high proportion of Type II B fibers and there were no large differences in the fiber type composition between the abdominal muscles. The range of mean fiber type percent was 26-32% Type I, 21-22% Type II A, and 46-52% Type II B fibers. Thus, based on the histochemical fiber type composition, the separate abdominal muscles appear to have a similar functional capacity. The cross-sectional area was larger for Type II than for Type I fibers, and the areas were similar in Type II A and Type II B fibers in each muscle. The rectus abdominis showed larger fibers of each type compared to the lateral abdominal muscles. The high proportion of Type II B fibers and large fiber size for Type II B fibers suggest that the abdominal muscles of Japanese macaques have properties similar to the propulsive and locomotory muscles in the limbs.
...
PMID:Fiber type composition of abdominal muscles in Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata). 958 11
Muscle fibre type composition and distribution in the biceps brachii (long head) and triceps brachii (long head) of the rat and rabbit were investigated using the following histochemical techniques:
myosin ATPase
, with preincubation at pH 10.4 and 4.35;
succinate dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) and glycogen phosphorylase. The muscle fibres were classified into slow-twitch (SO), fast-twitch glycolytic (FG), fast-twitch oxidative glycolytic (FOG and FOg) and fast-twitch oxidative fibres (FO). Significant differences in the regional distribution of muscle fibre types have been observed between the rat and the rabbit. In the rat, SO fibres were restricted to the deep regions of both biceps and triceps brachii, whereas FG fibres were located in the intermediate and superficial regions (the superficial regions contained the highest percentages of FG fibres). In the rabbit, SO and FG fibres were spread over the entire muscle, although SO and FG fibres were most abundant in the deep and superficial regions respectively. These findings indicate that the biceps and triceps brachii are more regionalised in the rat than in the rabbit.
...
PMID:Muscle fibre types and their distribution in the biceps and triceps brachii of the rat and rabbit. 964 21
Incrementally applied static stretch over 3 weeks resulted in a 72 % increase in the weight of the in situ latissimus dorsi muscle in rabbits. True growth rather than tissue oedema was confirmed by increases in the protein content (130 %), the cross-sectional area of the type I fibres (30 %) and the muscle length (i.e. number of sarcomeres in series increased 25 %). Despite an increase in the proportion of fibres staining positive for the enzyme
succinate dehydrogenase
(
SDH
), the
myosin ATPase
stain showed no appreciable fibre type transformation. While total power output in the stretched muscle was unchanged, its maximum mass specific power output, as determined by oscillatory work loops, was decreased by 50 %. The cross-sectional area that was occupied by connective tissue increased from 15 to 19 % in the stretched muscles, with a concomitant increase in passive energy dissipation. Some incrementally stretched muscles were then allowed an additional 3 weeks of maintained stretch to determine whether the adaptive changes would be preserved or reversed. Previous gains in muscle weight, length and area of type I fibres all remained. In contrast, the connective tissue content and the passive properties returned to control values during this period.
...
PMID:Growth induced by incremental static stretch in adult rabbit latissimus dorsi muscle. 1075 16
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