Activation of Type-Identified Motor Units during Centrally Evoked
Contractions in the Cat Medial Gastrocnemius Muscle. III. Muscle-Unit Force
Modulation.
Tansey, K. E., A. K. Yee and B. R. Botterman.
Institution: Department of Cell Biology and Neuroscience; and Department of
Physiology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas
75235.
APStracts 2:0242N, 1995.
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
1. The aim of this study was to examine the extent of muscle-unit force
modulation due to motoneuron firing-rate variation in type-identified motor
units of the cat medial gastrocnemius (MG) muscle, and investigate the
contribution of muscle-unit force modulation to whole-muscle force regulation.
The motoneuron discharge patterns recorded from 8 pairs of motor units during
12 smoothly graded muscle contractions evoked by stimulation of the
mesencephalic locomotor region (MLR) were used to reactivate those units in
isolation to estimate what their force profiles would have been like during
the evoked whole-muscle contractions. 2. For most motor units, muscle-unit
force modulation was similar to motoneuron firing-rate modulation, in that
muscle-unit force increased over a limited range (120-600 g) of increasing
whole-muscle tension and was then maintained at a near maximal (>70%) output
level as muscle force continued to rise. Most muscle units also decreased
their force outputs over a slightly larger range of declining whole-muscle
force before relaxing. This second finding was best explained by the
counterclockwise hysteresis recorded in the motor units' frequency-tension (f-
t) relationships. 3. In those instances when whole-muscle force fluctuated
just above the recruitment threshold of a motor unit, a substantial percentage
(10-25%) of the change in whole-muscle force could be accounted for by force
modulation in that motor unit alone. This finding suggested that few motor
units in the pool were simultaneously undergoing force modulation. To evaluate
this possibility, the extent of parallel muscle-unit force modulation within
the 8 pairs of simultaneously active motor units was evaluated. As with
parallel motoneuron firing-rate modulation, the extent of parallel muscle-unit
force modulation was limited to unit pairs of the same physiological type and
recruitment threshold. In a several instances, pairs of motor units displayed
parallel motoneuron firing-rate modulation, but did not show parallel muscle-
unit force modulation because of the nature of the motor units' f-t
relationships. 4. The limited extent of parallel muscle-unit force modulation
seen in these experiments implies that the major strategy for force modulation
in the cat MG muscle, involving contractions estimated to reach 30 to 40% of
maximum, may be motor-unit recruitment rather than motor-unit firing-rate
variation with resulting force modulation. Given, however, that the majority
of motor units are already recruited at these output levels (<40%), it is
proposed that motor unit firing-rate variation with resulting force modulation
may take over as the major muscle force modulating strategy at higher output
levels.
Received 13 September 1994; accepted in final form 9 August 1995.
APS Manuscript Number J578-4.
Article publication pending J. Neurophysiol.
ISSN 1080-4757 Copyright 1995 The American Physiological Society.
Published in APStracts on 24 August 1995.