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Encyclopedia > Muscle fibers

A muscle fiber (American usage) or muscle fibre (British usage) is a single cell of a muscle. Muscle fibers contain many myofibrils, the contractile unit of muscles. Muscle fibers are very long, a single fiber can reach a length of 30cm.


Skeletal muscle fibers can be divided into two basic types, type I (slow twitch fibers) and type II (fast twitch fibers).


Type 1 muscle fibers (slow oxidative fibers) use primarily oxidative metabolism and, as a result, have relatively high endurance. To support their high oxidative metabolism these muscle fibers typically have lots of mitochondria and myoglobin, and thus appear red, or what is typically termed "dark" meat in poultry. Type 1 muscle fibers are typically found in muscles of animals that require endurance, such as chicken leg muscles or the wing muscles of migrating birds (e.g. geese).


Type II muscle fibers use primarily anaerobic metabolism and have relatively low endurance. Due to their low oxidative demand these muscle fibers have low levels of mitochondria and myoglobin, and thus appear white. These muscle fibers are typically used during tasks requiring short burts of strength, such as sprints or weightlifting. Type II muscle fibers cannot sustain contractions for significant lenghts of time, and are typically found in the white meat (e.g. the breast) of chicken.


There are two sub-classes of type II muscle fibers, type IIa (Fast Oxidative) and IIb (Fast Oxidative Glycolytic). Type IIb (Fast Glycolytic) tire the fastest, and are the prevalent type in sedentary individuals. Some research suggests that these subtypes can switch with training to some degree.


The biochemical difference between the three types of muscle fibers is their myosin heavy chains.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Tetanus of a muscle fiber (487 words)
In a previous simulation, the Recruitment of Motor Units, you studied the mechanical properties of the gastrocnemius muscle of a cat.
The functional unit of the muscles is the sarcomere.
The units of the y-axis are percentages of the maximum tension generated by a single twitch contraction of the muscle fiber.
Muscle Fiber Types and Training (2198 words)
The differences in the speeds of contraction that gives the fibers their names can be explained, in part, by the rates of release of calcium by the sarcoplasmic reticulum (the muscle's storage site for calcium) and by the activity of the enzyme (myosin-ATPase) that breaks down ATP inside the myosin head of the contractile proteins.
Differences in muscle fiber com- position among athletes have raised the question of whether muscle structure is an acquired trait or is genetically determined.
Muscles produce force by recruiting motor units (a group of muscle fibers innervated by a motor neuron) along a gradient.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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