Abstract

We investigated the effect of small shortening imposed on frog muscle fibers during sarcomere-isometric tetani. Sarcomere length was initially kept constant, then slightly shortened (1%-5% of initial length) and clamped again for the remainder of the tetanus. Force level after the shortening was higher than the force level preceding the release. The size of the increase was larger than that predicted by the descending limb of the linear force-length relation. The difference between measured and predicted force levels increased with sarcomere length. At a sarcomere length of 3.2 microns, the force level after the shortening was higher by 50% than the force level expected from the linear descending limb. Dispersion of sarcomere-length within the sampled region was measured by two independent methods: striation imaging and analysis of the intensity profile of the first diffraction order. Sarcomere-length inhomogeneity in the sampled region was too small (standard deviation from the average sarcomere-length was +/- 0.03 microns) to account for the size of the increase in force. We studied the dependence of increase in tetanic force level after small sarcomere-length release on the size, velocity and timing of the release, as well as on initial sarcomere-length. Release size was the major determinant of the amount of increase in force. Release of 20 nm per half sarcomere was sufficient to produce an almost full force increase. Larger releases increased the force only moderately. Over the range studied, release velocity and timing had little or no effect.

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