A developmentally regulated disappearance of slow myosin in fast‐type muscles of the mouse

Abstract
Histochemistry and immunocytochemistry using an antibody to adult rat slow-type myosin demonstrated that about 10% of the fibers in the mouse extensor digitorum longus and semimembranosus muscles contain slow myosin during the first month after birth. In adult animals, these muscles have only 0-08% slow myosin-containing fibers. These results demonstrate a developmentally linked disappearance of an adult-type myosin, and show that the adult phenotype of muscle fibers is not necessarily determined before birth as previously suggested.