The effects of long lasting (4--5 weeks) nerve conduction block and denervation were compared by investigating contractile, morphological and histochemical properties of slow (soleus) and fast (EDL) rat skeletal muscles. The block was based on improved perfusion techniques of the sciatic nerve with a tetrodotoxin (TTX) solution delivered at doses adequate to obtain maximal effects in the muscles. The TTX-inactivated axons retained normal histological and physiological properties such as the ability to evoke full contractile responses, to regenerate, and to completely reinnervate muscle. In spite of their intact innervation or of their full reinnervation, the TTX-paralysed muscles underwent weight loss, fibre atrophy and reduction in force output quantitatively indistinguishable from those following denervation. The same was true for all other contractile parameters tested, that is, twitch speed, twitch to tetanus ratio, post-tetanic potentiation, endurance, and fibre type composition. The results indicate the fundamental role of activity as a regulatory signal for muscle contractile properties, while they do not support the notion of a participation of chemical, activity-independent factors in this regulation
Paralysis of innervated and reinnervated muscles equally affects contractile properties as does permanent denervation
BUFFELLI, Mario Rosario;PASINO, Efrem;CANGIANO, Alberto
1997-01-01
Abstract
The effects of long lasting (4--5 weeks) nerve conduction block and denervation were compared by investigating contractile, morphological and histochemical properties of slow (soleus) and fast (EDL) rat skeletal muscles. The block was based on improved perfusion techniques of the sciatic nerve with a tetrodotoxin (TTX) solution delivered at doses adequate to obtain maximal effects in the muscles. The TTX-inactivated axons retained normal histological and physiological properties such as the ability to evoke full contractile responses, to regenerate, and to completely reinnervate muscle. In spite of their intact innervation or of their full reinnervation, the TTX-paralysed muscles underwent weight loss, fibre atrophy and reduction in force output quantitatively indistinguishable from those following denervation. The same was true for all other contractile parameters tested, that is, twitch speed, twitch to tetanus ratio, post-tetanic potentiation, endurance, and fibre type composition. The results indicate the fundamental role of activity as a regulatory signal for muscle contractile properties, while they do not support the notion of a participation of chemical, activity-independent factors in this regulationI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.