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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (fatigue)
51,768 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. The effects of phosphate and protons on the mechanics and energetics of muscle contraction have been investigated using glycerinated rabbit psoas muscle. 2. Fibres were fully activated by addition of Ca2+ (pCa 4-5) at 10 degrees C. The velocities of contraction were measured in isotonic load clamps, and the velocities of unloaded fibres were measured by applying a series of step changes in fibre length. Fibre ATPase activity was monitored using an enzyme system to couple ADP production to reduced nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide (NADH) and measuring the depletion of NADH by optical density. 3. At pH 7.0 and 3 mM-phosphate, isometric tension (P0) was 13.2 +/- 0.9 N/cm (mean +/- S.E.M., n = 10 observations), the maximum contraction velocity (Vmax) was 1.63 +/- 0.05 lengths/s (n = 5) and the ATPase activity was 1.27 +/- 0.12 s-1 myosin head-1 (n = 35). Increasing phosphate from 3 to 20 mM at pH 7.0 does not affect Vmax, causes a small decrease in the ATPase activity (15-20%) and decreases P0 by approximately 20%. Changing pH from 7 to 6 at 3 mM-phosphate decreases P0 by 45% and both Vmax and ATPase activity by 25-30%. The effects of changing both pH and phosphate were approximately additive for all parameters measured. The inhibition of these parameters by low pH and high concentration of phosphate was reversible. 4. The force-velocity relation was fitted by the Hill equation using a non-linear least-squares method. The value of the parameter which describes the curvature, a/P0, was 0.20. The curvature of the force-velocity relation was not changed by addition of phosphate or by changes in pH. 5. These data provide information on both the kinetics of the actomyosin interaction and on the process of muscle fatigue. The data are consistent with models of cross-bridge kinetics in which phosphate is released within the powerstroke in a step involving a rapid equilibrium between states. The inhibition by protons is more complex, and may involve less specific effects on protein structure. 6. During moderate fatigue of living skeletal muscle, MgATP concentration is known to remain approximately constant at 4 mM, phosphate to increase from 3 to 20 mM, and protons from 0.1 to 1 microM. The data suggest that much of the inhibition of P0 observed during moderate fatigue can be explained by the increased levels of phosphate and protons, and that much of the inhibition of fibre Vmax and ATPase activity can be explained by the increase in protons.
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PMID:The inhibition of rabbit skeletal muscle contraction by hydrogen ions and phosphate. 284 89

A reexamination of the question of specificity of reinnervation of fast and slow muscle was undertaken using the original "self" nerve supply to the fast lateral gastrocnemius (LG) and slow soleus muscles in the rat hindlimb. This paradigm takes advantage of the unusual situation of a common nerve branch, which supplies both a fast and slow muscle, and of the opportunity to keep the reinnervating nerve in its normal position. In addition it provides a test of the effects of cross-reinnervation among muscles of the same functional group. The properties of soleus and LG muscles and of individual muscle units were characterized in normal rats and in rats 4-14 mo after cutting the lateral gastrocnemius-soleus (LGS) nerve and suture of the proximal stump to the dorsal surface of the LG muscle. Individual muscle units were functionally isolated by stimulation of single motor axons to LG or soleus muscle contained in teased filaments in the L4 and L5 ventral roots. Motor units were classified as fast contracting fatiguable (FF), fast contracting fatigue resistant (FR), and slow (S) on the basis of criteria described in the cat by Burke et al. and applied to rat muscle units by Gillespie et al. Muscle fibers were classified as fast glycolytic (FG), fast oxidative glycolytic (FOG), and slow oxidative (SO) on the basis of histochemical staining for myosin ATPase, nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide diaphorase (NADH-D), and alpha-glycerophosphate (alpha-GPD). Reinnervated muscles developed less force and weighed less in accordance with having fewer than normal motor units and having lost denervated muscle fibers. Normal LG contained a small proportion of S-type motor units (9%), whereas the majority (80%) of control soleus units were S type. After reinnervation, each muscle contained similar proportions of fast and slow motor units with S-type units constituting 30% of units in both muscles. When compared with the normal motor-unit sample, there was no significant change in average twitch and tetanic force in reinnervated muscles for each type of motor unit. However, the range within each type was greater, and there was considerable overlap between types. Twitch contraction time was inversely correlated with force in normal and reinnervated muscles as shown previously in self- and cross-reinnervated LGS in the cat. Changes in proportions of motor units in reinnervated LG were accompanied by corresponding changes in histochemical muscle types. This contrasted with reinnervated soleus in which the proportion of muscle fiber types was not significantly changed from normal despite significant change in motor-unit proportions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Motor units and histochemistry in rat lateral gastrocnemius and soleus muscles: evidence for dissociation of physiological and histochemical properties after reinnervation. 295 72

In principle, target inactivation analysis provides a means of determining the molecular weights (Mr) and states of aggregation of proteins in native environments where they are functionally active. We applied this irradiation technique to the rat liver microsomal membrane proteins: cytochrome b5, epoxide hydrolase, flavin-containing monooxygenase, NADH-ferricyanide reductase, NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase, and seven different forms of cytochrome P-450. Catalytic activities, spectral analysis of prosthetic groups, and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide electrophoresis/peroxidase-coupled immunoblotting were used to estimate apparent Mr values in rat liver microsomal membranes. Except in one case (cytochrome P-450PCN-E), the estimated Mr corresponded most closely to that of a monomer. Purified cytochrome P-450PB-B, NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase and epoxide hydrolase were also subjected to target inactivation analysis, and the results also suggested monomeric structures for all three proteins under these conditions. However, previous hydrodynamic and gel-exclusion results clearly indicate that all three of these proteins are oligomeric under these conditions. The discrepancy between target inactivation Mr estimates and hydrodynamic results is attributed to a lack of energy transfer between monomeric units. Thus, while P-450PCN-E may be oligomeric in microsomal membranes, target inactivation analysis does not appear to give conclusive results regarding the states of aggregation of these microsomal proteins.
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PMID:Target inactivation analysis applied to determination of molecular weights of rat liver proteins in the purified state and in microsomal membranes. 311 94

Contractile and histochemical properties of the triceps surae were compared in 16 males and 4 females aged 20 to 49 years. Surface electrical stimulation was used to determine twitch, tetanic and fatigue parameters. From these tests, twitch tension (Pt), time to peak tension (TPT), half relaxation time (1/2 RT), tetanic tensions at 10, 20 and 50 Hz and an index of fatigue (FI) were calculated. A maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) was also performed. Muscle samples from the belly of the lateral gastrocnemius were obtained using the needle biopsy technique. The samples were treated histochemically for myosin ATPase and NADH-tetrazolium reductase in order to classify the fibres as either Type I, slow twitch (ST) or Type II, fast twitch (FT) and to determine fibre areas. Correlations were performed between the grouped male and female contractile and histochemical variables. The results demonstrated significant positive relationships demonstrated significant positive relationships between percentage of ST fibres (%ST) and TPT (r = 0.49), and %ST and the ratio of tetanic forces at 10 Hz to 50 Hz (Po10/Po50) (r = 0.55). No significant relationships were obtained for Pt, 1/2 RT, MVC or FI with any histochemical parameter. The results suggest that fibre type distribution determined using myosin ATPase is related to electrically stimulated isometric contractile speeds and not to voluntary force generation (MVC) or electrically induced fatigue.
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PMID:Comparison of the histochemical and contractile properties of human triceps surae. 320 63

Muscle phosphorylase deficiency (McArdle's disease) has conventionally been considered a disorder of glycogenolysis, and the associated impairment in oxidative metabolism has been largely overlooked. Muscle glycogen normally is the primary oxidative fuel at exercise work loads requiring more than 75-80% of maximal O2 uptake (VO2max). Evidence is presented to support the hypothesis that a limited flux through the Embden-Myerhof pathway in McArdle's disease reduces the capacity to generate NADH required to support a normal VO2max. The extent of the oxidative defect is substrate dependent; i.e., it can be partially corrected by increasing the availability of alternative oxidative substrates (e.g., glucose, free fatty acids) to working muscle. Experiments employing modification of substrate availability closely link the hyperkinetic circulatory response to exercise (i.e., an abnormally large increase in O2 transport to skeletal muscle) and the premature muscle fatigue and cramping of McArdle patients with their oxidative impairment and suggest that a metabolic common denominator in these abnormal responses may be a pronounced decline in the muscle phosphorylation potential ([ATP]/[ADP][Pi]). The hyperkinetic circulation likely is mediated by the local effects on metabolically sensitive skeletal muscle afferents and vascular smooth muscle of K+, Pi, or adenosine or a combination of these substances released excessively from working skeletal muscle. The premature muscle fatigue and cramping of McArdle patients does not appear to be due to depletion of ATP but is associated with an increased accumulation of Pi and probably ADP in skeletal muscle. Accumulations of Pi and ADP are known to inhibit the myofibrillar, Ca2+, and Na+-K+-ATPase reactions.
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PMID:The pathophysiology of McArdle's disease: clues to regulation in exercise and fatigue. 352 13

In the process of defining the recruitment of fuel and pathway selection in rainbow trout fast-twitch white skeletal muscle, it was clear that the near-maximal myosin adenosinetriphosphatase activity during a 10-s sprint was supported solely by phosphocreatine hydrolysis. A conservative estimate of the ATP turnover was 188 mumol X g wet wt-1 X min-1. It was not until the rate and force of contraction decreased that the relative contribution of anaerobic glycogenolysis became increasingly important. Over a 10-min period of burst swimming at approximately 120% of maximum aerobic steady-state swimming velocity of trout determined in a Brett-type swim tunnel, fatigue was associated with the near-depletion of glycogen in white muscle. The ATP turnover supported by anaerobic glycogenolysis was 78 mumol X g wet wt-1 X min-1. The glycolytic pathway appeared functional at this time with control sites being identified at hexokinase and phosphofructokinase (PFK-1). PFK-1 did not appear to be inhibited by low muscle pH (pH 6.66). In another exercise protocol lasting 30 min, complete exhaustion was related to glycogen depletion. The sum of all glycolytic intermediates from glucose 6-phosphate to pyruvate at exhaustion decreased by a dramatic 80% compared with the 25% decrease for the 10-min fatigue swimming protocol. This large depletion of glycolytic intermediates was accompanied by an 80% fall in ATP, a 70-80% reduction in the ATP/ADP and phosphorylation potential, and a 2.5-fold increase in the NAD/NADH. Associated with these changes was a marked displacement of the phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK), and the combined glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase-PGK reactions from thermodynamic equilibrium. As a general conclusion, fatigue and exhaustion should be viewed as a multicomponent biochemical process in response to low glycogen and not leveled at one particular step of the glycolytic pathway.
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PMID:Regulation of anaerobic ATP-generating pathways in trout fast-twitch skeletal muscle. 360 83

Subjects maintained an isometric contraction of the quadriceps femoris muscle at two-thirds maximal voluntary contraction (m.v.c.) force for 5 s (5.0 +/- 0.3 s; mean +/- S.E. of mean; n = 6) or until fatigue (52 +/- 4 s; n = 13). Muscle biopsies were obtained at rest, immediately after the contractions and also at 1 and 4 min of recovery after contraction to fatigue. In all subjects 5 s isometric contraction resulted in an increase of muscle NADH (0.084 +/- 0.012 at rest to 0.203 +/- 0.041 mmol/kg dry wt.) and a decrease of phosphocreatine (PC; change in concentration = -17.3 +/- 3.8 mmol/kg dry wt.). Glucose-6-phosphate concentration was more than doubled whereas lactate increased in only four of the six subjects. The two subjects who did not show any increase in lactate also had the lowest increase in NADH. At fatigue NADH increased to 0.226 +/- 0.032 mmol/kg dry wt. which was not significantly different from the value after 5 s contraction. Muscle PC was nearly depleted and lactate increased 12-fold above resting levels. The major part (65%) of the NADH increase at fatigue had reverted after 1 min recovery but only a slight further decrease occurred between 1 and 4 min of recovery. In relative terms the time course of the changes in muscle NADH during the first minute of recovery was similar to that of PC resynthesis, suggesting a common regulator such as O2 availability. In contrast to the delayed return of NADH concentration, PC resynthesis continued during the later part of the recovery period and PC concentration was almost fully restored after 4 min of recovery. It is concluded that muscle NADH is already maximally increased in the first seconds of muscle contraction at two-thirds m.v.c. Indirect evidence indicates that this increase reflects a reduction of the mitochondrial NAD-NADH redox couple. The rapid establishment of a reduced mitochondrial redox state at the start of muscle contraction will probably lead to a reduction of the redox state in the cytoplasm also and therefore be important for enhancing lactate formation.
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PMID:Redox state changes in human skeletal muscle after isometric contraction. 361 70

The relationship between the redox state and lactate accumulation in contracting human skeletal muscle was investigated. Ten men performed bicycle exercise for 10 min at 40 and 75% of maximal oxygen uptake [VO2(max.)], and to fatigue (4.8 +/- 0.6 min; mean +/- S.E.M.) at 100% VO2(max.). Biopsies from the quadriceps femoris muscle were analysed for NADH, high-energy phosphates and glycolytic intermediates. Muscle NADH was 0.20 +/- 0.02 mmol/kg dry wt. of muscle at rest, and decreased to 0.12 +/- 0.01 (P less than 0.01) after exercise at 40% VO2(max.), but no change occurred in the [lactate]/[pyruvate] ratio. These data, together with previous results on isolated cyanide-poisoned soleus muscle, where NADH increased while [lactate]/[pyruvate] ratio was unchanged [Sahlin & Katz (1986) Biochem. J. 239, 245-248], suggest that the observed changes in muscle NADH occurred within the mitochondria. After exercise at 75 and 100% VO2(max.), muscle NADH increased above the value at rest to 0.27 +/- 0.03 (P less than 0.05) and 0.32 +/- 0.04 (P less than 0.001) mmol/kg respectively. Muscle lactate was unchanged after exercise at 40% VO2(max.), but increased substantially at the higher work loads. At 40% VO2(max.), phosphocreatine decreased by 11% compared with the values at rest, and decreased further at the higher work loads. The decrease in phosphocreatine reflects increased ADP and Pi. It is concluded that muscle NADH decreases during low-intensity exercise, but increases above the value at rest during high-intensity exercise. The increase in muscle NADH is consistent with the hypothesis that the accelerated lactate production during submaximal exercise is due to a limited availability of O2 in the contracting muscle. It is suggested that the increases in NADH, ADP and Pi are metabolic adaptations, which primarily serve to activate the aerobic ATP production, and that the increased anaerobic energy production (phosphocreatine breakdown and lactate formation) is a consequence of these changes.
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PMID:Redox state and lactate accumulation in human skeletal muscle during dynamic exercise. 366 77

The fast-twitch posterior latissimus dorsi muscle of normal and genetically dystrophic chickens was subjected to continuous indirect electrical stimulation at 10 Hz for periods of 4-8 weeks. To sustain this in vivo nerve stimulation an internally implantable miniature stimulator device was designed. This regime of stimulation caused complete fatigue of the normal muscle within 5 min of its initiation. The dystrophic muscles maintained a very small degree of contractile activity during this initial phase. Tangible twitching of the muscle returned in 5 week birds between 3 and 5 days and in 10 week birds between 11 and 16 days after implantation. After 4 weeks of stimulation, no significant change was measured in the time-to-peak of the isometric twitch response, nor in the half-relaxation time. The resistance to fatigue was significantly increased in the stimulated muscles when tested with a series of tetani at 40 Hz. The mean fibre area was decreased, in all muscles stimulated for longer than 3 weeks, in comparison to their contralateral controls, except where fibre splitting in dystrophic birds abnormally reduced the control value. The majority fibre type of the muscle was changed from type IIB to IIA. The histochemical reactions for both NADH-linked oxidation and phosphorylase were distinctly increased in the stimulated muscles. In normal muscle, stimulation increased somewhat the number of nuclei per unit area and changed their intracellular distribution, so that a greater proportion was found adjacent to the sarcolemma. The normal posterior latissimus dorsi muscle responded to chronic stimulation with increases of 3-6-fold in its acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity. The maximum change in AChE occurred after 2 weeks stimulation; a steady level, 3 times that of the control unstimulated muscle, persisted at later times. Chronic stimulation suppressed the over-production of AChE that is characteristic of dystrophic chicken fast-twitch muscle, to attain a level comparable to the AChE activity in a stimulated normal muscle. Stimulation exerted a strong normalizing influence on dystrophic muscle, as assessed morphologically. The characteristic fibre rounding, fibre hypertrophy and myonuclear proliferation were reduced. This influence was most marked where the stimulation was initiated before the major pathological changes had occurred, but was also significant when commenced in strongly affected birds of 10-11 weeks.
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PMID:Low frequency chronic electrical stimulation of normal and dystrophic chicken muscle. 379 78

An animal model for the human condition of mitochondrial myopathy has been established and characterized physiologically and biochemically. The NADH: coenzyme Q reductase inhibitor diphenyleneiodonium [Bloxham (1979) Biochem. Soc. Trans. 7, 103-106] was either infused acutely in vivo into rat hind limb or injected chronically into rats. Both modes of delivery resulted in a reduced muscle oxidative capacity and increased fatigue. Analysis of muscle metabolites by h.p.l.c. and 31P-n.m.r. indicated that ATP concentrations were similar to control values during periods of stimulation and these were maintained by the phosphocreatine pool. During the recovery period after muscle stimulation in the experimental animals the muscle pH remained depressed and the rate of phosphocreatine synthesis was markedly delayed as compared with controls. Factors thought to be involved in the fatigue response are discussed in relation to this model.
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PMID:Experimentally induced defects of mitochondrial metabolism in rat skeletal muscle. Biological effects of the NADH: coenzyme Q reductase inhibitor diphenyleneiodonium. 392 66


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