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The variation in isometric tension with sarcomere length in vertebrate muscle fibres

3.1K

Citations

11

References

1966

Year

TLDR

The study re‑examined the variation of isometric tetanus tension with sarcomere length in frog striated muscle, confirming that sliding‑filament theory explains many features of the length‑tension relation. The tension curve shows a plateau between 2.05 and 2.2 µm, with steeper declines above the plateau and below 1.67 µm, and indicates that thin‑filament tension in the plateau arises from equal contributions of overlapping bridges.

Abstract

1. The variation of isometric tetanus tension with sarcomere length in single fibres from frog striated muscle has been re-investigated with special precautions to ensure uniformity of sarcomere length within the part of the fibre being studied.2. In most respects the results of Ramsey & Street (1940) were confirmed, but (a) the peak of the curve was found to consist of a plateau between sarcomere lengths of 2.05 and 2.2 mu, (b) the decline of tension above this plateau is steeper than found by Ramsey & Street, and (c) the decline of tension below the plateau becomes suddenly steeper at a sarcomere length of about 1.67 mu.3. Many features of this length-tension relation are simply explained on the sliding-filament theory.4. It is concluded that, in the plateau and at greater lengths, the tension on each thin filament is made up of equal contributions from each bridge which it overlaps on adjacent thick filaments.5. Internal resistance to shortening is negligible in this range but becomes progressively more important with shortening below the plateau.

References

YearCitations

1957

3.4K

1954

1.6K

1957

635

1966

349

1963

335

1961

300

1962

219

1953

190

1953

190

1965

94

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