Abstract

Muscles perform a wide range of motile functions in animals. Among various types are skeletal and cardiac muscles, which exhibit a steady auto-oscillation of force and length when they are activated at an intermediate level of contraction. This phenomenon, termed spontaneous oscillatory contraction or SPOC, occurs devoid of cell membranes and at fixed concentrations of chemical substances, and is thus the property of the contractile system per se. We have previously developed a theoretical model of SPOC and proposed that the oscillation emerges from a dynamic force balance along both the longitudinal and lateral axes of sarcomeres, the contractile units of the striated muscle. Here, we experimentally tested this hypothesis by developing an imaging-based analysis that facilitates detection of the structural changes of single sarcomeres at unprecedented spatial resolution. We found that the sarcomere width oscillates anti-phase with the sarcomere length in SPOC. We also found that the oscillatory dynamics can be altered by osmotic compression of the myofilament lattice structure of sarcomeres, but they are unchanged by a proteolytic digestion of titin/connectin—the spring-like protein that provides passive elasticity to sarcomeres. Our data thus reveal the three-dimensional mechanical dynamics of oscillating sarcomeres and suggest a structural requirement of steady auto-oscillation.

Highlights

  • Muscles perform a wide range of motile functions in animals

  • Our data, showing the anti-phase oscillation between the A-band width (Aw) and sarcomere length (SL) (Fig. 2), are consistent with the prediction drawn from our theoretical ­model[17,18,19] and provide rigorous experimental evidence that the change in the filament lattice spacing is involved in SPOC

  • We have demonstrated that this volumetric effect can be observed in sarcomeres of skinned myofibrils, a constant volume is not strictly maintained

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Summary

Introduction

Muscles perform a wide range of motile functions in animals. Among various types are skeletal and cardiac muscles, which exhibit a steady auto-oscillation of force and length when they are activated at an intermediate level of contraction. Phase-contrast imaging revealed a clear striation pattern of sarcomeres along the long axis of myofibrils; SL could be determined by measuring the distance between the adjacent intensity peaks that appeared in a line-scan profile (green trace and double-arrow, Fig. 1A).

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