Forelimb muscle and joint actions in Archosauria: insights from Crocodylus johnstoni (Pseudosuchia) and Mussaurus patagonicus (Sauropodomorpha)

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Introduction

Materials and Methods

Digitization and musculoskeletal modelling

Bone geometry acquisition

Joint axis estimation, reference pose and terminology

Muscle reconstruction

Muscle path specification

Joint ROM analysis

Analysis of muscle moment arms

Results

Muscle reconstruction

Joint ROM analysis

Muscle moment arm analysis

Glenohumeral joint (Figs. 57; Figs. S8 and S9; Table 3; Table S4)

Elbow joint (Fig. 8; Table 3; Table S5)

Wrist and manus joints (Figs. 911; Table 4; Tables S6 and S7)

Discussion

Joint ROM analysis: implications for the evolution of forelimb posture in sauropodomorphs

Archosaur forelimb muscle actions: major differences between sprawling quadrupedalism and erect bipedalism

Influence of the reference vs. resting pose on muscle actions

Functional differences in the resting pose

Implications of normalization metrics used for moment arm comparisons

Sensitivity analysis: influence of cartilage volume on moment arms at the elbow joint

Manus pronation in Mussaurus and the evolution of quadrupedalism in Sauropodomorpha

Conclusion

Supplemental Information

Table S1. Wrapping surfaces used for the musculoskeletal models of Crocodylus johnstoni and Mussaurus patagonicus.

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Table S2. Assessment of normalizing metrics used in moment arm analyses.

‘MC II’ is metacarpal II length. Lengths are in metres (m); for Mussaurus the sum circumference in mm was used to estimate body mass (see Discussion), and the ratio of ‘linearized’ body masses to the 0.33exponent is shown in the final column’s final entry (for comparison to normalizing ratios of segment lengths in the ‘ratio’ row to the left).

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Table S3. Ranges of motion (ROMs) of forelimb in Mussaurus and Crocodylus about each degree of freedom analyzed in this study in the reference pose.

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Table S4. Results for glenohumeral joint moment arms (in metres) of major muscle groups in the resting pose for Mussaurus and Crocodylus.

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Table S5. Results for elbow joint moment arms (in metres) of major muscle groups in the resting pose for Mussaurus and Crocodylus.

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Table S6. Results for metacarpo-phalangeal and inter-phalangeal joint moment arms (in metres) of major muscle groups for digit one of Mussaurus.

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Table S7. Results for elbow and wrist joint moment arms (in metres) of major muscle groups in the reference pose for Mussaurus and Crocodylus.

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Table S8. Muscle actions for Crocodylus and Mussaurus in the reference pose.

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Table S9. Results for shoulder joint moment arms (in metres) of major muscle groups in the reference pose for Mussaurus and Crocodylus.

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Table S10. Results of the sensitivity analysis for elbow joint moment arms (in metres) of the major extensor muscle group in the resting pose in Mussaurus.

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Table S11. Wrapping surfaces used for the musculoskeletal model of Mussaurus patagonicus in the sensitivity analysis.

For additional muscle abbreviations and details see Table 1 and Table S1’s caption.

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Table S12. Results for elbow joint moment arms (in metres) of major muscle groups in the resting pose in Mussaurus in a pronated position (by 30°) for long axis rotation.

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Figure S1. Three-dimensional musculoskeletal model of the right forelimb of Mussaurus patagonicus (elbow area; medial view) showing via points.

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Figure S2. Isolated wrapping objects used in this study. Cylinder (A), ellipsoid (B) and torus (C), in multiple views.

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Figure S3. Three-dimensional models and wrapping surfaces.

Three-dimensional musculoskeletal models of the right forelimbs of Mussaurus patagonicus (A–C) and Crocodylus johnstoni (D–F) in the resting pose, showing wrapping objects used in this study in lateral (A, D), medial (B, E) and caudomedial (C, F) views. Scale bar: 10 cm. Compare with Fig. 3.

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Figure S4. Pronation/supination moment arms around the glenohumeral joint, normalized to humerus segment length, plotted against pronation/supination joint angles for Crocodylus and Mussaurus in the reference pose.

(A) mostly pronator; (B) mostly supinators; (C) mixed pronators/supinators. Negative moment arms and glenohumeral angles correspond to pronation, while positive values correspond to supination. For muscle abbreviations see Table 1.

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Figure S5. Extension/flexion moment arms around the glenohumeral joint, normalized to humerus segment length, plotted against extension/flexion joint angles for Crocodylus and Mussaurus in the reference pose.

(A) mostly extensors; (B) mostly flexors; (C) mixed extensors/flexors. Negative moment arms and glenohumeral angles correspond to extension, while positive values correspond to flexion. For muscle abbreviations see Table 1.

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Figure S6. Abduction/adduction moment arms around the glenohumeral joint, normalized to humerus segment length, plotted against abduction/adduction joint angles for Crocodylus and Mussaurus in the reference pose.

(A) mostly abductors; (B) mostly adductors; (C) mixed abductors/adductors. Negative moment arms and glenohumeral angles correspond to abduction, while positive values correspond to adduction. For muscle abbreviations see Table 1.

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Figure S7. Extension/flexion moment arms around the elbow joint, normalized to radius-ulna segment length, plotted against extension/flexion joint angles for Crocodylus and Mussaurus in the reference pose.

(A) extensors; (B) flexors; (C) mixed extensors/flexors. Negative moment arms correspond to extension, while positive values correspond to flexion. Zero elbow angle corresponds to full extension, while larger angles correspond to flexion. For muscle abbreviations see Table 1.

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Figure S8. Pronation/supination moment arms around the glenohumeral joint, normalized to humerus segment length, plotted against extension/flexion joint angles for Crocodylus and Mussaurus in the resting pose.

(A) mostly pronators; (B) mostly supinators; (C) mixed pronators/supinators. Negative moment arms and glenohumeral angles correspond to pronation, while positive values correspond to supination. For muscle abbreviations see Table 1.

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Figure S9. Abduction/adduction moment arms around the glenohumeral joint, normalized to humerus segment length, plotted against flexion/extension joint angles for Crocodylus and Mussaurus in the resting pose.

(A) mostly abductors; (B) mostly adductors; (C) mixed abductors/adductors. Negative moment arms and glenohumeral angles correspond to abduction, while positive values correspond to adduction. For muscle abbreviations see Table 1.

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Figure S10. Pronation/supination moment arms around the elbow joint (not normalized), plotted against pronation/supination joint angles for Mussaurus in the resting pose.

(A) mostly pronators; (B) mostly supinators; (C) mixed pronators/supinators. Negative moment arms and joint angles correspond to pronation, whilst positive values correspond to supination. Zero elbow angle corresponds to a neutral position in between pronation/supination. For muscle abbreviations see Table 1.

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Online Supplementary text.

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Additional Information and Declarations

Competing Interests

John Hutchinson is an Academic Editor for PeerJ.

Author Contributions

Alejandro Otero conceived and designed the experiments, performed the experiments, analysed the data, contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools, wrote the paper, prepared figures and/or tables, reviewed drafts of the paper.

Vivian Allen performed the experiments, analysed the data, contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools, prepared figures and/or tables, reviewed drafts of the paper.

Diego Pol analysed the data, contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools, reviewed drafts of the paper.

John R. Hutchinson conceived and designed the experiments, performed the experiments, analysed the data, contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools, wrote the paper, prepared figures and/or tables, reviewed drafts of the paper.

Data Availability

The following information was supplied regarding data availability:

Otero, Alejandro; Allen, Vivian; Pol, Diego; Hutchinson, John (2017): Crocodylus musculoskeletal models. figshare.

https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.4928696.v1

Otero, Alejandro; Allen, Vivian; Pol, Diego; Hutchinson, John (2017): Mussaurus musculoskeletal models. figshare.

https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.4928684.v1

Funding

This research was possible through financial support provided by the International Exchanges Program of the Royal Society (to John R. Hutchinson and Alejandro Otero). This project has also received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement no. 695517) to John R. Hutchinson and Agencia Nacional de Promoción Científica y Tecnológica (PICT 2015-0504) to Alejandro Otero. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

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