How to build fast muscles: Synchronous and asynchronous designs

被引:42
|
作者
Syme, DA
Josephson, RK
机构
[1] Univ Calgary, Dept Biol Sci, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada
[2] Univ Calif Irvine, Sch Biol Sci Neurobiol & Behav, Irvine, CA 92697 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1093/icb/42.4.762
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
In animals, muscles are the most common effectors that translate neuronal activity into behavior. Nowhere is behavior more restricted by the limits of muscle performance than at the upper range of high-frequency movements. Here, we see new and multiple designs to cope with the demands for speed. Extremely rapid oscillations in force are required to power cyclic activities such as flight in insects or to produce vibrations for sound. Such behaviors are seen in a variety of invertebrates and vertebrates, and are powered by both synchronous and asynchronous muscles. In synchronous muscles, each contraction/relaxation cycle is accompanied by membrane depolarization and subsequent repolarization, release of activator calcium, attachment of cross-bridges and muscle shortening, then removal of activator calcium and cross-bridge detachment. To enable all of these to occur at extremely high frequencies a suite of modifications are required, including precise neural control, hypertrophy of the calcium handling machinery, innovative mechanisms to bind calcium, and molecular modification of the cross-bridges and regulatory proteins. Side effects are low force and power output and low efficiency, but the benefit of direct, neural control is maintained. Asynchronous muscles, in which there is not a 1:1 correspondence between neural activation and contraction, are a radically different design. Rather than rapid calcium cycling, they rely on delayed activation and deactivation, and the resonant characteristics of the wings and exoskeleton to guide their extremely high-frequency contractions. They thus avoid many of the modifications and attendant trade-offs mentioned above, are more powerful and more efficient than high-frequency synchronous muscles, but are considerably more restricted in their application.
引用
收藏
页码:762 / 770
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Using Launch-on-Capture for Testing BIST Designs Containing Synchronous and Asynchronous Clock Domains
    Wang, Laung-Terng
    Wen, Xiaoqing
    Wu, Shianling
    Furukawa, Hiroshi
    Chao, Hao-Jan
    Sheu, Boryau
    Guo, Jianghao
    Jone, Wen-Ben
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON COMPUTER-AIDED DESIGN OF INTEGRATED CIRCUITS AND SYSTEMS, 2010, 29 (02) : 299 - 312
  • [22] Synchronous and Asynchronous Tools
    Hodges, Charles B.
    Hunger, Gail M.
    TECHTRENDS, 2011, 55 (05) : 39 - 44
  • [23] Using Launch-on-Capture for Testing Scan Designs Containing Synchronous and Asynchronous Clock Domains
    Wu, Shianling
    Wang, Laung-Terng
    Wen, Xiaoqing
    Jiang, Zhigang
    Tan, Lang
    Zhang, Yu
    Hu, Yu
    Jone, Wen-Ben
    Hsiao, Michael S.
    Li, James Chien-Mo
    Huang, Jiun-Lang
    Yu, Lizhen
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON COMPUTER-AIDED DESIGN OF INTEGRATED CIRCUITS AND SYSTEMS, 2011, 30 (03) : 455 - 463
  • [24] Asynchronous and Synchronous-Asynchronous Particle Swarms
    Hotstegs, Caya L. O.
    Kestler, Hans A.
    Kraus, Johann M.
    RECENT TRENDS AND FUTURE CHALLENGES IN LEARNING FROM DATA, ECDA 2022, 2024, : 33 - 48
  • [25] Neuronal Regulation of Fast Synaptotagmin Isoforms Controls the Relative Contributions of Synchronous and Asynchronous Release
    Turecek, Josef
    Regehr, Wade G.
    NEURON, 2019, 101 (05) : 938 - +
  • [26] THEORY OF CONTRACTION OF ASYNCHRONOUS MUSCLES
    DESHCHEREVSKII, VI
    BIOPHYSICS-USSR, 1970, 15 (01): : 51 - +
  • [27] Launch-on-Shift Test Generation for Testing Scan Designs Containing Synchronous and Asynchronous Clock Domains
    Wu, Shianling
    Wang, Laung-Terng
    Wen, Xiaoqing
    Jone, Wen-Ben
    Hsiao, Michael S.
    Li, Fangfang
    Li, James Chien-Mo
    Huang, Jiun-Lang
    ACM TRANSACTIONS ON DESIGN AUTOMATION OF ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS, 2012, 17 (04)
  • [28] Slack matching asynchronous designs
    Beerel, Peter A.
    Lines, Andrew
    Davies, Mike
    Kim, Nam-Hoon
    12TH IEEE INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON ASYNCHRONOUS CIRCUITS AND SYSTEMS, PROCEEDINGS, 2006, : 184 - 194
  • [29] Synchronizing Asynchronous Learning Combining Synchronous and Asynchronous Techniques
    Worthington, Tom
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2013 8TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER SCIENCE & EDUCATION (ICCSE 2013), 2013, : 618 - 621
  • [30] ASYNCHRONOUS DESIGNS FOR SYSTOLIC ARRAYS
    JUN, MS
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST ANNUAL WORKSHOP FOR THE ACM SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP ON FORTH: SIGFORTH 89, 1989, : 49 - 58