Vol. 284, Issue 6, R1513-R1520, June 2003
Season and testosterone affect contractile properties of fast
calling muscles in the gray tree frog Hyla
chrysoscelis
Mahasweta
Girgenrath and
Richard L.
Marsh
Department of Biology, Northeastern University, Boston,
Massachusetts 02115
In
anurans, circulating levels of androgens influence certain secondary
sexual characteristics that are expressed only during the breeding
season. We studied the contractile properties of external oblique
muscles (used to power sound production) in a species of North American
gray tree frog, Hyla chrysoscelis, during the breeding
season and also in testosterone-treated captive males and females after
the breeding season. Compared with the muscles of breeding-season
males, the trunk muscles of postbreeding-season males have 50% less
mass, 60% longer twitches, and 40% slower shortening velocities.
Testosterone levels similar to those found in breeding-season male
hylid frogs restore the contractile speed and mass of male trunk
muscles and also convert the small slow trunk muscles of females into
larger fast-contracting muscles. We conclude that androgens likely play
a key role in altering the contractile properties of these muscles in
males during the annual cycle, allowing them to operate in the breeding
season at the frequencies required to produce the characteristic
rapidly pulsed calls of this species. Females as well as
nonbreeding-season males do not produce advertising calls, and
therefore the slower muscles found in these animals may allow more
economic operation of these muscles. The effects of testosterone on
female trunk muscles indicate the potential of this hormone in
contributing to the sexual dimorphism in size and contractile
properties of these muscles, but this dimorphism is likely due to the
interaction of more than one hormone.
twitch kinetics; force-velocity curve; sexual dimorphism