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      El acoplamiento excitación-contracción en el músculo esquelético: preguntas por responder a pesar de 50 años de estudio Translated title: Excitation-contraction coupling in skeletal muscle: questions remaining after 50 years of research

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          Abstract

          El mecanismo de acoplamiento excitación-contracción fue definido en el músculo esquelético como la secuencia de eventos que ocurre desde la generación del potencial de acción en la fibra muscular hasta que se inicia la generación de tensión. La regulación e interacción de dichos eventos entre sí ha sido estudiada durante los últimos 50 años utilizando diferentes técnicas, con las cuales se estableció la importancia y origen del ion calcio como activador contráctil, se conocen las principales proteínas involucradas y se inició el estudio de la base ultraestructural y de la regulación farmacológica; además, hay evidencias de que el acoplamiento excitación-contracción se altera en diferentes situaciones como en el envejecimiento, en la fatiga muscular y en algunas enfermedades musculares. Sin embargo, aún hay varias preguntas por responder: ¿cómo es el desarrollo y envejecimiento del mecanismo de acoplamiento excitación-contracción?, ¿cuál es su papel en la fatiga muscular y en algunas enfermedades musculares?, ¿cuál es la naturaleza de la interacción entre diferentes proteínas involucradas en el acoplamiento excitación-contracción? La presente revisión describe el acoplamiento excitación-contracción en el músculo esquelético y las técnicas utilizadas para su estudio como introducción para discutir algunas de las preguntas que aún falta por responder al respecto.

          Translated abstract

          The excitation-contraction coupling mechanism was defined as the entire sequence of reactions linking excitation of plasma membrane to activation of contraction in skeletal muscle. By using different techniques, their regulation and interactions have been studied during the last 50 years, defining until now the importance and origin of the calcium ion as a contractile activator and the main proteins involved in the whole mechanism. Furthermore, the study of the ultrastructural basis and pharmacological regulation of the excitation-contraction coupling phenomenon has begun. The excitation-contraction coupling is thought to be altered in situations as ageing, muscle fatigue and some muscle diseases. However, many questions remain to be answered. For example, (1) How excitation-contraction coupling develops and ages? (2) What role does it play in muscle fatigue and other diseases? (3) What is the nature of the interaction between the proteins believed to be involved? The present review describes excitation-contraction coupling in skeletal muscle and techniques used to better understand it as an introduction for discussing unanswered questions regarding excitation-contraction coupling.

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          Cellular mechanisms of muscle fatigue.

          R Fitts (1993)
          Fatigue, defined as the failure to maintain the required or expected power output, is a complex problem, since multiple factors are clearly involved, with the relative importance of each dependent on the fiber type composition of the contracting muscles(s), and the intensity, type, and duration of the contractile activity. The primary sites of fatigue appear to be within the muscle cell itself and for the most part do not involve the central nervous system or the neuromuscular junction. The major hypotheses of fatigue center on disturbances in the surface membrane, E-C coupling, or metabolic events. The cell sites most frequently linked to the etiology of skeletal muscle fatigue are shown in Figure 1. Skeletal muscles are composed of at least four distinct fiber types (3 fast twitch and 1 slow twitch), with the slow type I and fast type IIa fibers containing the highest mitochondrial content and fatigue resistance. Despite fiber type differences in the degree of fatigability, the contractile properties undergo characteristic changes with the development of fatigue that can be observed in whole muscles, single motor units, and single fibers. The Po declines, and the contraction and relaxation times are prolonged. Additionally, there is a decrease in the peak rate of tension development and decline and a reduced Vo. Changes in Vo are more resistant to fatigue than Po and are not observed until Po has declined by at least 10% of its initial prefatigued value. However, the reduced peak power by which fatigue is defined results from both a reduction in Vo and Po. In the absence of muscle fiber damage, the prolonged relaxation time associated with fatigue causes the force-frequency curve to shift to the left, such that peak tensions are obtained at lower frequencies of stimulation. In a mechanism not clearly understood, the central nervous system senses this condition and reduces the alpha-motor nerve activation frequency as fatigue develops. In some cases, selective LFF develops that displaces the force-frequency curve to the right. Although not proven, it appears likely that this condition is associated with and likely caused by muscle injury, such that the SR releases less Ca2+ at low frequencies of activation. Alternatively, LFF could result from a reduced membrane excitability, such that the sarcolemma action potential frequency is considerably less than the stimulation frequency.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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            A non-disruptive technique for loading calcium buffers and indicators into cells.

            R Y Tsien (1981)
            Present methods for measuring or buffering intracellular free calcium concentrations are almost entirely limited to robust and well anchored cells which can tolerate insertion of ion-selective microelectrodes or microinjection of calcium indicators or buffers into one cell at a time. A very few types of small cells can be loaded with buffers or indicators during controlled lysis, but such procedures grossly perturb membrane integrity and soluble cytoplasmic constituents. Liposome fusion releases only trace quantities of the trapped solute into the cytoplasm and incorporates foreign lipid into the target cell membranes. I now describe a simple technique which loads Ca2+-selective chelators into the cytoplasm of intact cells in suspension and avoids the disadvantages of previous methods. The chelators are made temporarily membrane permeable by masking their four carboxylates with special esterifying groups which then hydrolyse inside the cells, regenerating and trapping the original chelators. The method is demonstrated on red cells, mast cells and lymphocytes.
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              Effect of hydrogen peroxide and dithiothreitol on contractile function of single skeletal muscle fibres from the mouse.

              1. We used intact single fibres from a mouse foot muscle to study the role of oxidation-reduction in the modulation of contractile function. 2. The oxidant hydrogen peroxide (H2O2, 100-300 microM) for brief periods did not change myoplasmic Ca2+ concentrations ([Ca2+]i) during submaximal tetani. However, force increased by 27 % during the same contractions. 3. The effects of H2O2 were time dependent. Prolonged exposures resulted in increased resting and tetanic [Ca2+]i, while force was significantly diminished. The force decline was mainly due to reduced myofibrillar Ca2+ sensitivity. There was also evidence of altered sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) function: passive Ca2+ leak was increased and Ca2+ uptake was decreased. 4. The reductant dithiothreitol (DTT, 0.5-1 mM) did not change tetanic [Ca2+]i, but decreased force by over 40 %. This was completely reversed by subsequent incubations with H2O2. The force decline induced by prolonged exposure to H2O2 was reversed by subsequent exposure to DTT. 5. These results show that the elements of the contractile machinery are differentially responsive to changes in the oxidation-reduction balance of the muscle fibres. Myofibrillar Ca2+ sensitivity appears to be especially susceptible, while the SR functions (Ca2+ leak and uptake) are less so.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Journal
                bio
                Biomédica
                Biomédica
                Instituto Nacional de Salud (Bogotá )
                0120-4157
                March 2009
                : 29
                : 1
                : 140-180
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Universidad de Antioquia Colombia
                [2 ] Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas Venezuela
                Article
                S0120-41572009000100017
                41a22678-ba65-4404-8b1f-466946ec3dc0

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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                SciELO Colombia

                Self URI (journal page): http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_serial&pid=0120-4157&lng=en
                Categories
                TROPICAL MEDICINE

                Infectious disease & Microbiology
                muscle,skeletal,muscle contraction,muscle relaxation,calcium,ryanodine receptor calcium release channel,dihydropyridine receptors,muscle fatigue,músculo esquelético,contracción muscular,relajación muscular,calcio,canal liberador de calcio,canales de calcio tipo L,receptor de rianodina,fatiga muscular

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