Abstract

Male Wistar rats were made hyperthyroid by intraperitoneal injections on alternate days for 1-6 weeks, of 200 micrograms/kg triiodothyronine (T3). The effects of this treatment on the contractile properties of the soleus, a slow twitch and the extensor digitorum longus (EDL), a fast twitch skeletal muscle, were studied in vivo in the anaesthetized animal. Post mortem, serial frozen sections of both muscles were stained histochemically for myosin ATPase, succinic dehydrogenase and phosphorylase. Muscle fibres were classified as either slow twitch (SO), fast twitch oxidative glycolytic (FOG) or fast twitch glycolytic (FG). Elevation of plasma T3 levels is associated with progressive alterations in the muscle fibre populations of both muscles. In the soleus there is conversion of SO to FOG fibres while in the EDL the main effect is FG to FOG conversion. There are also marked changes, mainly confined to the soleus muscle, in contractile properties; progressive increases in isometric twitch and tetanic tension and in the rates of contraction and relaxation during both twitch and tetanus. The effect of T3 on slow muscle contractility may be related to its effect on muscle phenotype. However, changes in the former precede detectable fibre population changes. T3 may influence properties such as the CA2+ binding activity of sarcoplasmic reticulum of existing slow twitch fibres before the later changes associated with the interconversion of fibre types occur.

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