» Articles » PMID: 15523522

The Resilience of the Size Principle in the Organization of Motor Unit Properties in Normal and Reinnervated Adult Skeletal Muscles

Overview
Specialties Pharmacology
Physiology
Date 2004 Nov 4
PMID 15523522
Citations 33
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Henneman's size principle relates the input and output properties of motoneurons and their muscle fibers to size and is the basis for size-ordered activation or recruitment of motor units during movement. After nerve injury and surgical repair, the relationship between motoneuron size and the number and size of the muscle fibers that the motoneuron reinnervates is initially lost but returns with time, irrespective of whether the muscles are self- or cross-reinnervated by the regenerated axons. Although the return of the size relationships was initially attributed to the recovery of the cross-sectional area of the reinnervated muscle fibers and their force per fiber, direct enumeration of the innervation ratio and the number of muscle fibers per motoneuron demonstrated that a size-dependent branching of axons accounts for the size relationships in normal muscle, as suggested by Henneman and his colleagues. This same size-dependent branching accounts for the rematching of motoneuron size and muscle unit size in reinnervated muscles. Experiments were carried out to determine whether the daily amount of neuromuscular activation of motor units accounts for the size-dependent organization and reorganization of motor unit properties. The normal size-dependent matching of motoneurons and their muscle units with respect to the numbers of muscle fibers per motoneuron was unaltered by synchronous activation of all of the motor units with the same daily activity. Hence, the restored size relationships and rematching of motoneuron and muscle unit properties after nerve injuries and muscle reinnervation sustain the normal gradation of muscle force during movement by size-ordered recruitment of motor units and the process of rate coding of action potentials. Dynamic modulation of size of muscle fibers and their contractile speed and endurance by neuromuscular activity allows for neuromuscular adaptation in the context of the sustained organization of the neuromuscular system according to the size principle.

Citing Articles

Skeletal muscle innervation: Reactive oxygen species as regulators of neuromuscular junction dynamics and motor unit remodeling.

Guzman S, Brooks S Free Radic Biol Med. 2025; 230:58-65.

PMID: 39892501 PMC: 11893230. DOI: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2025.01.053.


Aging Skeletal Muscles: What Are the Mechanisms of Age-Related Loss of Strength and Muscle Mass, and Can We Impede Its Development and Progression?.

Gustafsson T, Ulfhake B Int J Mol Sci. 2024; 25(20).

PMID: 39456714 PMC: 11507513. DOI: 10.3390/ijms252010932.


Estimation of the number of motor units in the human extensor digitorum brevis using MScanFit.

Klein C, Liu H, Xiong Y PLoS One. 2024; 19(4):e0302214.

PMID: 38669263 PMC: 11051589. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0302214.


The Effect of Sex and Different Repetition Maximums on Kinematics and Surface Electromyography in the Last Repetition of the Barbell Back Squat.

Hegdahl Gundersen A, Nygaard Falch H, Bao Fredriksen A, van den Tillaar R J Funct Morphol Kinesiol. 2024; 9(2).

PMID: 38651433 PMC: 11036245. DOI: 10.3390/jfmk9020075.


Evolution, biomechanics, and neurobiology converge to explain selective finger motor control.

Xu J, Mawase F, Schieber M Physiol Rev. 2024; 104(3):983-1020.

PMID: 38385888 PMC: 11380997. DOI: 10.1152/physrev.00030.2023.