Browsing by Author "Schappacher-Tilp, Gudrun"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Open Access Molecular Mechanisms of Muscle Contraction: A Historical Perspective(Elsevier, 2023-06) Herzog, Walter; Schappacher-Tilp, GudrunStudies of muscle structure and function can be traced to at least 2,000 years ago. However, the modern era of muscle contraction mechanisms started in the 1950s with the classic works by AF Huxley and HE Huxley, both born in the United Kingdom, but not related and working independently. HE Huxley was the first to suggest that muscle contraction occurred through the sliding of two sets of filamentous structures (actin or thin filaments and myosin or thick filaments). AF Huxley then developed a biologically inspired mathematical model suggesting a possible molecular mechanism of how this sliding of actin and myosin might take place. This model then evolved from a two-state to a multi-state model of myosin-actin interactions, and from one that suggested a linear motor causing the sliding to a rotating motor. This model, the cross-bridge model of muscle contraction, is still widely used in biomechanics, and even the more sophisticated cross-bridge models of today still contain many of the features originally proposed by AF Huxley. In 2002, we discovered a hitherto unknown property of muscle contraction that suggested the involvement of passive structures in active force production, the so-called passive force enhancement. It was quickly revealed that this passive force enhancement was caused by the filamentous protein titin, and the three-filament (actin, myosin, and titin) sarcomere model of muscle contraction evolved. There are many suggestions of how these three proteins interact to cause contraction and produce active force, and one such suggestion is described here, but the molecular details of this proposed mechanism still need careful evaluation.Item Open Access A novel three-filament model of force generation in eccentric contraction of skeletal muscles(PLOS One, 2015-01) Schappacher-Tilp, Gudrun; Leonard, Timothy R.; Desch, Gertrud Wolfgang; Herzog, WalterWe propose and examine a three filament model of skeletal muscle force generation, thereby extending classical cross-bridge models by involving titin-actin interaction upon active force production. In regions with optimal actin-myosin overlap, the model does not alter energy and force predictions of cross-bridge models for isometric contractions. However, in contrast to cross-bridge models, the three filament model accurately predicts history-dependent force generation in half sarcomeres for eccentric and concentric contractions, and predicts the activation-dependent forces for stretches beyond actin-myosin filament overlap.