How myofilaments operate at short mammalian skeletal muscle lengths is unknown. A common assumption is that thick (myosin-containing) filaments get compressed at the Z-disc. We provide ultrastructural evidence of sarcomeres contracting down to 0.44 μm - approximately a quarter of thick filament resting length - in long-lasting contractions while apparently keeping a regular, parallel thick filament arrangement. Sarcomeres produced force at such extremely short lengths. Furthermore, sarcomeres adopted a bimodal length distribution with both modes below lengths where sarcomeres are expected to generate force in classic force-length measurements. Mammalian fibres did not restore resting length but remained short after deactivation, as previously reported for amphibian fibres, and showed increased forces during passive re-elongation. These findings are incompatible with viscoelastic thick filament compression but agree with predictions of a model incorporating thick filament sliding through the Z-disc. This more coherent picture of mechanical mammalian skeletal fibre functioning opens new perspectives on muscle physiology.
CITATION STYLE
Tomalka, A., Heim, M., Klotz, A., Rode, C., & Siebert, T. (2022). Ultrastructural and kinetic evidence support that thick filaments slide through the Z-disc. Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 19(197). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2022.0642
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