PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Kyle P. Blum AU - Kenneth S. Campbell AU - Brian C. Horslen AU - Paul Nardelli AU - Stephen N. Housley AU - Timothy C. Cope AU - Lena H. Ting TI - Diverse muscle spindle firing properties emerge from multiscale muscle mechanics AID - 10.1101/858209 DP - 2019 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 858209 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/11/29/858209.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/11/29/858209.full AB - Sensory information about the body’s mechanical interactions with the environment are critical for neural control of movement. Muscle spindle sensory neurons richly innervate muscles in vertebrates; their firing patterns as muscles stretch have been well-characterized experimentally, but have not been fully explained mechanistically. Here, we show that a diverse range of muscle spindle firing characteristics are emergent from first principles of muscle contractile mechanics. We develop a mechanistic muscle spindle model that predicts well-known phenomena such as variations in muscle spindle sensitivity due to prior movement history and nonlinear scaling with muscle stretch velocity. The model further predicts how central commands to muscle spindles–fusimotor drive–alters their firing responses, and shows how seemingly paradoxical muscle spindle firing during voluntary force production in humans can arise. Our multiscale muscle spindle model provides a unifying biophysical framework that may broadly explain and predict movement-related sensory signals in health and disease.