Contractile characteristics and innervation ratio of rat soleus motor units.
- 1 May 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 412 (1), 1-21
- https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1989.sp017601
Abstract
1. Physiological properties of motor units in the soleus muscle were studied in anaesthetized rats using ventral root splitting to isolate single units. 2. Motor unit types were classified by the same criteria used to classify cat hindlimb motor units into types FR (fast-twitch, fatigue-resistant) and type S (slow-twitch, fatigue-resistant). Type FR units were estimated to generate 10% of whole-muscle tension and type S 90%. All FR units showed sag in the unfused tetanus at frequencies with interpulse intervals greater than 175% of twitch time to peak, but not at 125% (Burke, Levine, Tsairis and Zajac, 1973). 3. The muscle fibers belong to twelve single motor units were depleted of glycogen by prolonged stimulation, permitting analysis of their histochemical profiles. Type FR units were found to consist of type IIA muscle fibers and type S units of type I muscle fibers. 4. Direct determinations were made of fiber area, innervation ratio (number of muscle fibers supplied by one motoneurone) and hence specific tension (tetanic tension generated per unit cross-sectional area) of individually identified motor units. Motoneurones were found to innervate between 84 and 178 muscle fibers (mean 110) in type S units and between 126 and 161 fibers in type FR units (mean 142). Fiber areas were larger for type FR units and there was a significant difference in specific tension of the two unit types (type S lower). 5. Indirect estimates of innervation ratio and specific tension were obtained from counts of muscle fiber types, and relative frequencies of motor unit types in the soleus unit pool. Observations agreed well with results of direct measurements. 6. The evidence provided suggests that differences in tension generated by type FR and S units in rat soleus muscle are primarily due to differences in innervation ratio and fiber area, with a small contribution from differences in specific tension.This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
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