TY - JOUR
T1 - How the Brain May Have Shaped Muscle Anatomy and Physiology
T2 - A Preliminary Study
AU - Muchlinski, Magdalena N.
AU - Hemingway, Holden W.
AU - Pastor, Juan
AU - Omstead, Kailey M.
AU - Burrows, Anne M.
N1 - Funding Information:
Grant Sponsor: National Science Foundation, Grant Number: 1440624 *Correspondence to: Magdalena N. Muchlinski, Center for Anatomical Sciences, University of North Texas Health Science Center, 3500 Camp Bowie Blvd., RES 232C, Fort Worth, TX 76107. E-mail: magdalena.muchlinski@unthsc.edu Received 27 May 2017; Accepted 15 October 2017. DOI 10.1002/ar.23746 Published online in Wiley Online Library (wileyonlinelibrary. com).
Funding Information:
A special thank you is extended to Dr. Andrew Kitchener, Georg Hantke, and Alan Lothian, as well as the support staff at the National Museum of Scotland. We appreciate the help provided by the faculty at the Universidad de Valladolid as well. Cadavers were also obtained from the Duke Lemur Center. This is a duke publication #1386. The authors would like to thank Drs. Damiano Marchi and Hartstone-Rose for an invitation to the muscle symposium at ICVM and providing a place for our work at the Anatomical Record. The authors thank Drs. Adam Hartstone-Rose and Rui Diogo for their thoughtful commentary early on during the development of this project.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
PY - 2018/3
Y1 - 2018/3
N2 - Skeletal muscle fibers are often used to evaluate functional differences in locomotion. However, because there are energetic differences among muscle fiber cells, muscle fiber composition could be used to address evolutionary questions about energetics. Skeletal muscle is composed of two main types of fibers: Type I and II. The difference between the two can be reduced to how these muscle cells use oxygen and glucose. Type I fibers convert glucose to ATP using oxygen, while Type II fibers rely primarily on anaerobic metabolic processes. The expensive tissue hypothesis (ETH) proposes that the energetic demands imposed on the body by the brain result in a reduction in other expensive tissues (e.g., gastrointestinal tract). The original ETH dismisses the energetic demands of skeletal muscle, despite skeletal muscle being (1) an expensive tissue when active and (2) in direct competition for glucose with the brain. Based on these observations we hypothesize that larger brained primates will have relatively less muscle mass and a decrease in Type I fibers. As part of a larger study to test this hypothesis, we present data from 10 species of primates. We collected body mass, muscle mass, and biopsied four muscles from each specimen for histological procedures. We collected endocranial volumes from the literature. Using immunohistochemistry, a muscle fiber composition profile was created for each species sampled. Results show that larger brained primates have less muscle and fewer Type I fibers than primates with smaller brains. Results clarify the relationship between muscle mass and brain mass and illustrate how muscle mass could be used to address energetic questions. Anat Rec, 301:528–537, 2018.
AB - Skeletal muscle fibers are often used to evaluate functional differences in locomotion. However, because there are energetic differences among muscle fiber cells, muscle fiber composition could be used to address evolutionary questions about energetics. Skeletal muscle is composed of two main types of fibers: Type I and II. The difference between the two can be reduced to how these muscle cells use oxygen and glucose. Type I fibers convert glucose to ATP using oxygen, while Type II fibers rely primarily on anaerobic metabolic processes. The expensive tissue hypothesis (ETH) proposes that the energetic demands imposed on the body by the brain result in a reduction in other expensive tissues (e.g., gastrointestinal tract). The original ETH dismisses the energetic demands of skeletal muscle, despite skeletal muscle being (1) an expensive tissue when active and (2) in direct competition for glucose with the brain. Based on these observations we hypothesize that larger brained primates will have relatively less muscle mass and a decrease in Type I fibers. As part of a larger study to test this hypothesis, we present data from 10 species of primates. We collected body mass, muscle mass, and biopsied four muscles from each specimen for histological procedures. We collected endocranial volumes from the literature. Using immunohistochemistry, a muscle fiber composition profile was created for each species sampled. Results show that larger brained primates have less muscle and fewer Type I fibers than primates with smaller brains. Results clarify the relationship between muscle mass and brain mass and illustrate how muscle mass could be used to address energetic questions. Anat Rec, 301:528–537, 2018.
KW - Type I muscle fibers
KW - energetics
KW - expensive tissue hypothesis
KW - primate evolution
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U2 - 10.1002/ar.23746
DO - 10.1002/ar.23746
M3 - Article
C2 - 29418115
AN - SCOPUS:85041846268
SN - 1932-8486
VL - 301
SP - 528
EP - 537
JO - Anatomical Record
JF - Anatomical Record
IS - 3
ER -