Summary
In the series-fibred muscle architecture commonly found in large muscles of mammals and birds, the intrafasciculary-terminating muscle fibres have no direct tendinous attachments. Contractile force produced in these fibres must be transmitted between adjacent muscle fibres via the endomysial connective tissue which separates them. The endomysium is thus an essential mechanical component in such muscles. Studies of motor end-plate banding patterns and the frequent occurrence of tapering ends of fibres within the fascicles of the bovine sternomandibularis muscle show it to be a series-fibred muscle. Sodium hydroxide digestion of fixed samples of this muscle to remove the myofibrillar apparatus revealed the endomysium to be a disordered planar network of mainly curvilinear collagen fibrils.
The orientation distribution of the collagen fibrils in the endomysial network was measured by image analysis of scanning electron micrographs. Analysis of endomysial preparations from muscle fixed at sarcomere lengths between 1–4 μm showed that the orientation distribution of collagen fibrils is quantitatively related to muscle length. At rest sarcomere length the collagen fibril network is not completely random, but has a slight circumferential bias. The orientation distribution shows a progressive shift towards the circumferential direction at short sarcomere lengths and towards the longitudinal direction at long sarcomere lengths. The relationship between the number-weighted mean collagen orientation and sarcomere length was compared to two geometric models of network behaviour, the isoareal and constant shape models. both fitted the data reasonably, although the constant shape model described the rate of change of mean orientation more closely.
From fibrous composites theory, the reinforcement efficiency factor, η was calculated from the measured collagen fibril orientation distributions. These calculations predict a non-linearly increasing longitudinal tensile modulus for the endomysium with increasing sarcomere length, in agreement with its known non-linear properties, but confirm that the tensile properties of the endomysium are unsuitable for transmission of tensile force from muscle fibres contracting near rest length. This reinforces a previous interpretation that contractile force is transmitted between neighbouring muscle fibres by trans-laminar shear through the endomysium rather than by in-plane tension.
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Purslow, P.P., Trotter, J.A. The morphology and mechanical properties of endomysium in series-fibred muscles: variations with muscle length. J Muscle Res Cell Motil 15, 299–308 (1994). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00123482
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00123482