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Biophysical Journal 36: 759-773 (1981)
© 1981 the Biophysical Society

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Intensity of light diffraction from striated muscle as a function of incident angle.

R J Baskin, R L Lieber, T Oba and Y Yeh

ABSTRACT

In a recently developed theory of light diffraction by single striated muscle fibers, we considered only the case of normal beam incidence. The present investigation represents both an experimental and theoretical extension of the previous work to arbitrary incident angle. Angle scan profiles over a 50 degrees range of incident angle (+25 degrees to -25 degrees) were obtained at different sarcomere lengths. Left and right first-order scan peak separations were found to be a function of sarcomere length (separation angle = 2 theta B), and good agreement was found between theory and experiment. Our theoretical analysis further showed that a myofibrillar population with a single common skew angle can yield an angle scan profile containing many peaks. Thus, it is not necessary to associate each peak with a different skew population. Finally, we have found that symmetry angle, theta s, also varies with sarcomere length, but not in a regular manner. Its value at a given sarcomere length is a function of a particular region of a given fiber and represents the average skew angle of all the myofibril populations illuminated. The intensity of a diffraction order line is considered to be principally the resultant of two interference phenomena. The first is a volume-grating phenomenon which results from the periodic A-I band structure of the fiber (with some contribution from Z bands and H zones). The second is Bragg reflection from skew planes, if the correct relation between incident angle and skew angle is met. This may result in intensity asymmetry between the left and right first order lines.




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T. J. Patel, R. Das, J. Friden, G. J. Lutz, and R. L. Lieber
Sarcomere strain and heterogeneity correlate with injury to frog skeletal muscle fiber bundles
J Appl Physiol, November 1, 2004; 97(5): 1803 - 1813.
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Copyright © 1981 by the Biophysical Society.