Contractile properties of rat soleus muscle after 15 days of hindlimb suspension.
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The properties of the contractile elements interacting to develop force in atrophied rat soleus muscle were studied by using single skinned fibers, which permitted direct access to the contractile apparatus. Muscle atrophy was induced by 15 days of hindlimb suspension. Suspension resulted in a decrease of maximal tension relative to an important decline in fiber diameter. Ca affinity of the contractile proteins was not changed insofar as the tension-pCa relationship was not shifted along the pCa axis. However, after hindlimb suspension 1) the value of the Hill coefficient from the tension-pCa curve was found to be higher, 2) a higher Ca threshold for activation was reported, and 3) a significant increase in contraction kinetics was described. All these results suggested that after suspension the mechanical properties of the slow-twitch soleus appeared to resemble more closely those of a fast-twitch muscle. Our results were in complete agreement with published histochemical data.