» Articles » PMID: 25467113

Locomotor Activity Influences Muscle Architecture and Bone Growth but Not Muscle Attachment Site Morphology

Overview
Journal J Hum Evol
Specialties Biology
Social Sciences
Date 2014 Dec 4
PMID 25467113
Citations 36
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The ability to make behavioural inferences from skeletal remains is critical to understanding the lifestyles and activities of past human populations and extinct animals. Muscle attachment site (enthesis) morphology has long been assumed to reflect muscle strength and activity during life, but little experimental evidence exists to directly link activity patterns with muscle development and the morphology of their attachments to the skeleton. We used a mouse model to experimentally test how the level and type of activity influences forelimb muscle architecture of spinodeltoideus, acromiodeltoideus, and superficial pectoralis, bone growth rate and gross morphology of their insertion sites. Over an 11-week period, we collected data on activity levels in one control group and two experimental activity groups (running, climbing) of female wild-type mice. Our results show that both activity type and level increased bone growth rates influenced muscle architecture, including differences in potential muscular excursion (fibre length) and potential force production (physiological cross-sectional area). However, despite significant influences on muscle architecture and bone development, activity had no observable effect on enthesis morphology. These results suggest that the gross morphology of entheses is less reliable than internal bone structure for making inferences about an individual's past behaviour.

Citing Articles

Frog Fibres: What Muscle Architecture Can Tell Us About Anuran Locomotor Function.

Leavey A, Richards C, Porro L J Morphol. 2024; 286(1):e70016.

PMID: 39690478 PMC: 11652814. DOI: 10.1002/jmor.70016.


Effect of masticatory muscle function on the craniofacial sutures of the anterior viscerocranium in growing rats.

Gorucu-Coskuner H, Al-Yassary M, Billiaert K, Kiliaridis S, Antonarakis G Eur J Oral Sci. 2024; 132(6):e13027.

PMID: 39552117 PMC: 11602443. DOI: 10.1111/eos.13027.


Clinical implications of reconsideration of enthesitis/enthesopathy/enthesial erosion, as tendon attachment-localized avulsions and stress fracture equivalents.

Rothschild B World J Orthop. 2024; 15(10):902-907.

PMID: 39473521 PMC: 11514551. DOI: 10.5312/wjo.v15.i10.902.


Comparative muscle anatomy of the anuran pelvis and hindlimb in relation to locomotor mode.

Leavey A, Richards C, Porro L J Anat. 2024; 245(5):751-774.

PMID: 39119773 PMC: 11470798. DOI: 10.1111/joa.14122.


Reconstructing patterns of domestication in reindeer using 3D muscle attachment areas.

Siali C, Niinimaki S, Harvati K, Karakostis F Archaeol Anthropol Sci. 2024; 16(1):19.

PMID: 38162318 PMC: 10756864. DOI: 10.1007/s12520-023-01910-5.


References
1.
GOLDMAN H, Kindsvater J, Bromage T . Correlative light and backscattered electron microscopy of bone--Part I: Specimen preparation methods. Scanning. 1999; 21(1):40-3. DOI: 10.1002/sca.4950210106. View

2.
Clarke K, Still J . Gait analysis in the mouse. Physiol Behav. 1999; 66(5):723-9. DOI: 10.1016/s0031-9384(98)00343-6. View

3.
Biewener A, Gillis G . Dynamics of muscle function during locomotion: accommodating variable conditions. J Exp Biol. 1999; 202(Pt 23):3387-96. DOI: 10.1242/jeb.202.23.3387. View

4.
Eliot D, Jungers W . Fifth metatarsal morphology does not predict presence or absence of fibularis tertius muscle in hominids. J Hum Evol. 2000; 38(2):333-42. DOI: 10.1006/jhev.1999.0337. View

5.
Hamrick M, McPherron A, Lovejoy C, Hudson J . Femoral morphology and cross-sectional geometry of adult myostatin-deficient mice. Bone. 2000; 27(3):343-9. DOI: 10.1016/s8756-3282(00)00339-2. View