Abstract

The tension/compression asymmetry observed in the stress-stretch response of skeletal muscle is not well understood. The collagen network in the extracellular matrix (ECM) almost certainly plays a major role, but the details are unknown. This paper reports qualitatively and quantitatively on skeletal muscle ECM reorganization during applied deformation using confocal imaging of collagen through use of a fluorescently-tagged specific collagen binding protein (CNA35-EGFP) of porcine and chicken muscle samples under tensile and compressive deformation in both the fibre and cross-fibre directions. This reveals the overall three-dimensional structure of collagen in perimysium in planes perpendicular and parallel to the muscle fibres in both species. Furthermore, there is clear evidence of the reorganization of these structures under compression and tension applied in both the muscle fibre and cross-fibre directions. These observations improve our understanding of perimysium structure and response to three-dimensional deformations and are an important basis for constitutive models of passive skeletal muscle. Although overall behaviour was similar, some differences in perimysium structure were observed between chicken and porcine muscle tissue. Further work is required to better understand which structures are responsible for the tension and compression stress-strain asymmetry previously observed in the mechanical response of passive skeletal muscle.

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