Diabetes, Vol 43, Issue 5 622-628, Copyright © 1994 by American Diabetes Association
Single-fiber study of contractile and biochemical properties of skeletal muscles in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats
GM Stephenson, A O'Callaghan and DG Stephenson
Department of Zoology, La Trobe University, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia.
Mechanically skinned, single muscle fibers, isometrically activated in pH
and Ca2+ (Sr2+) buffered solutions were used to examine the function of the
contractile apparatus in slow- and fast-twitch fibers from soleus (SOL,
predominantly slow-twitch) and extensor digitorum longus (EDL,
predominantly fast-twitch) muscles of streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic
rats and age-matched controls. Three and 14 days after STZ administration,
the contractile properties of muscle fibers from diabetic rats did not
differ significantly from those of controls with respect to several
mechanical parameters, such as maximum Ca-activated tension, activation
threshold, and sensitivity to Ca2+ and Sr2+. In contrast, 28 days after STZ
administration, 37.5% of the fast-twitch EDL fibers developed maximum
activated tensions (77.1 +/- 10.4 kN/m2), which were significantly lower
than those developed by controls (244.0 +/- 14.3 kN/m2), and the
slow-twitch SOL fibers displayed a significantly higher sensitivity to Ca2+
(and Sr2+) than the controls. All fibers from diabetic rats, including the
low-tension EDL fibers and higher Ca sensitivity SOL fibers displayed
control-like electrophoretic profiles of the major myofibrillar proteins.
Taken together with data from earlier studies on the effects of long-term
diabetes on whole skeletal muscle contractility, these results strongly
suggest that 1) the decrease in tetanic tension output of EDL muscles
induced by diabetes is caused mainly by direct effects of the diabetic
condition on the contractile/regulatory system of a subpopulation of
fast-twitch fibers, which develop little force, and 2) the diabetes-induced
slowing of twitch times of SOL muscles is caused in part by the increased
sensitivity to Ca2+ of the contractile apparatus in the slow-twitch fibers.