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Journal of Dental Research
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CRITICAL REVIEWS IN ORAL BIOLOGY & MEDICINE

Fiber-type Composition of the Human Jaw Muscles—(Part 2) Role of Hybrid Fibers and Factors Responsible for Inter-individual Variation

J.A.M Korfage, J.H. Koolstra, G.E.J. Langenbach and T.M.G.J. van Eijden*

Department of Functional Anatomy, Academic Center for Dentistry Amsterdam, Meibergdreef 15, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Correspondence: * corresponding author, t.m.vaneijden{at}amc.uva.nl

This is the second of two articles about fiber-type composition of the human jaw muscles. It reviews the functional relationship of hybrid fibers and the adaptive properties of jaw-muscle fibers. In addition, to explain inter-individual variation in fiber-type composition, we discuss these adaptive properties in relation to environmental stimuli or perturbations. The fiber-type composition of the human jaw muscles is very different from that of limb and trunk muscles. Apart from the presence of the usual type I, IIA, and IIX myosin heavy-chains (MyHC), human jaw-muscle fibers contain MyHCs that are typical for developing or cardiac muscle. In addition, much more frequently than in limb and trunk muscles, jaw-muscle fibers are hybrid, i.e., they contain more than one type of MyHC isoform. Since these fibers have contractile properties that differ from those of pure fibers, this relatively large quantity of hybrid fibers provides a mechanism that produces a very fine gradation of force and movement. The presence of hybrid fibers might also reflect the adaptive capacity of jaw-muscle fibers. The capacity for adaptation also explains the observed large inter-individual variability in fiber-type composition. Besides local influences, like the amount of muscle activation and/or stretch, more general influences, like aging and gender, also play a role in the composition of fiber types.

Key Words: jaw muscles • fiber type • myosin heavy-chain

Journal of Dental Research, Vol. 84, No. 9, 784-793 (2005)
DOI: 10.1177/154405910508400902


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