4.4 Article

The influence of jaw-muscle fibre-type phenotypes on estimating maximum muscle and bite forces in primates

Journal

INTERFACE FOCUS
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsfs.2021.0009

Keywords

myosin heavy chain; maximum isometric tension; hybrid fibres; masseter; temporalis; muscle force

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. NSF [BCS 1719743, 0962677, 0833394, 0635649, 0552285, 0452160]
  3. Duke Arts and Sciences Council Research Grant
  4. Duke University School of Medicine Core Voucher Program
  5. Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie
  6. Division Of Behavioral and Cognitive Sci [0452160] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  7. Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie
  8. Division Of Behavioral and Cognitive Sci [0552285, 0962677] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Anthropological studies have shown that integrating fibre types and specific tensions can improve the estimation of jaw-muscle and bite force in primates, as treating jaw adductors as uniformly slow or fast muscles may lead to overestimation of maximum muscle forces. The variation in fibre types and associated specific tensions in jaw adductors across different primate species highlights the need for a more nuanced approach in modelling muscle forces.
Numerous anthropological studies have been aimed at estimating jaw-adductor muscle forces, which, in turn, are used to estimate bite force. While primate jaw adductors show considerable intra- and intermuscular heterogeneity in fibre types, studies generally model jaw-muscle forces by treating the jaw adductors as either homogeneously slow or homogeneously fast muscles. Here, we provide a novel extension of such studies by integrating fibre architecture, fibre types and fibre-specific tensions to estimate maximum muscle forces in the masseter and temporalis of five anthropoid primates: Sapajus apella (N = 3), Cercocebus atys (N = 4), Macaca fascicularis (N = 3), Gorilla gorilla (N = 1) and Pan troglodytes (N = 2). We calculated maximum muscle forces by proportionally adjusting muscle physiological cross-sectional areas by their fibre types and associated specific tensions. Our results show that the jaw adductors of our sample ubiquitously express MHC alpha-cardiac, which has low specific tension, and hybrid fibres. We find that treating the jaw adductors as either homogeneously slow or fast muscles potentially overestimates average maximum muscle forces by as much as approximately 44%. Including fibre types and their specific tensions is thus likely to improve jaw-muscle and bite force estimates in primates.

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