Vol. 282, Issue 6, C1270-C1277, June 2002
Changes in contractile properties of skeletal muscle during
developmentally programmed atrophy and death
Lawrence M.
Schwartz1 and
Robert L.
Ruff2
1 Department of Biology, University of
Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003; and
2 Department of Neurology and Rehabilitation and Spinal
Cord Injury and Disorders Care Line, Cleveland Veterans Affairs
Medical Center and Case Western Reserve University School of
Medicine, Cleveland, Ohio 44106
Skeletal muscle atrophy
and death are protracted processes that accompany aging and
pathological insults in mammals. The intersegmental muscles (ISMs) from
the tobacco hawkmoth Manduca sexta are composed of giant
fibers that undergo distinct hormonally-regulated programs of atrophy
and death at the end of metamorphosis. Atrophy occurs during the 3 days
preceding adult emergence and results in a 40% reduction of mass,
whereas death takes place during the subsequent 30 h and results
in the complete loss of the fibers. There are no significant changes in
tetanic force or calcium sensitivity in skinned fiber preparations
during atrophy. However, the size of caffeine-induced contractions fell
by about 50%. With the onset of the death phase, dramatic reductions
occur in ISM: tetanic force, twitch amplitude, resting potential,
caffeine-induced contractions, calcium sensitivity, and Hill
coefficients. Several lines of evidence suggest that ISM atrophy is
caused by an increase in protein turnover without significant
modification of fiber organization. In contrast, ISM death is
accompanied by disorganization of the contractile apparatus and
concomitant loss of contractile function.
Manduca; apoptosis; calcium; degeneration; sarcopenia