Myofibrillar-protein isoforms and sarcoplasmic-reticulum Ca2+-transport activity of single human muscle fibres.
Academic Article
Publication Date:
1984
abstract:
In this study the polymorphism of myofibrillar proteins and the Ca2 +-uptake activity
of sarcoplasmic reticulum were analysed in single fibres from human skeletal muscles.
Two populations of histochemically identified type-I fibres were found differing in
the number of light-chain isoforms of the constituent myosin, whereas the pattern of
light chains of fast myosin of type-IIA and type-IIB fibres was indistinguishable.
Regulatory proteins, troponin and tropomyosin, and other myofibrillar proteins, such
as M- and C-proteins, showed specific isoforms in type-I and type-II fibres.
Furthermore, tropomyosin presented different stoichiometries of the a- and f,-
subunits between the two types of fibres. Sarcoplasmic-reticulum volume, as
indicated by the maximum capacity for calcium oxalate accumulation, was almost
identical in type-I and type-II fibres, whereas the rate of Ca2 + transport was twice as
high in type-II as compared with type-I fibres. It is concluded that, in normal human
muscle fibres, there is a tight segregation of fast and slow isoforms of myofibrillar
proteins that is very well co-ordinated with the relaxing activity of the sarcoplasmic
reticulum. These findings may thus represent a molecular correlation with the
differences of the twitch-contraction time between fast and slow human motor units.
This tight segregation is partially lost in the muscle fibres of elderly individuals.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Betto, Romeo
Published in: