Chapter 9 Muscle - Los Angeles Mission College
Chapter 9 Muscle
Functions of Skeletal Muscle
* movement
* maintain posture
* stabilize joints
* heat production
Gross anatomy
* muscle cell = muscle fiber many myofibrils
* myofibrils cylindrical units within each cell contain sarcomeres
* fascicle = bundle many cells
* muscle many fascicles
microanatomy
* sarcolemma cell membrane
* T tubules run deep into SR
* sarcoplasmic reticulum stores Ca++
* surrounds myofibrils
* terminal cisternae
* sarcoplasm = cytoplasm
* glycogen
* myoglobin
* sarcomere unit of contraction
sarcomere
* unit of contraction
* many along length of myofibril - “striations”
* Z disc ends of sarcomere
* A band (dark) myosin and overlapping actin
* I band (light) non-overlapping actin
* contractile proteins actin ; myosin
contractile proteins
* thick filament myosin
* tail shaft
* heads 2 binding sites for actin
* thin filament
* actin helical chain of actin molecules myosin binding sites
* tropomyosin covers actin – myosin binding sites
* troponin binds tropomyosin to actin has Ca++ binding sites
Contraction of Sarcomere
* sarcomere gets shorter ; not the filaments
* Sliding Filament Model
* actin and myosin slide past each other
* Z discs get closer = sarcomere shortens
Ca stimulates filament sliding
* Ca++ binds to troponin
* troponin changes shape
* pulls tropomyosin off the actin
* exposes actin
* actin and myosin bind
Who does what to who ?
* myosin vs ADP
* w/ ADP myosin extended
* w/o ADP myosin bends
* actin vs ATP
* ATP knocks actin off myosin
* Actin knocks ADP off myosin
* Ca actin and myosin bind
put it together
* resting myosin extended w/ ADP
* stimulus Ca
* cross bridge formation myosin and actin bind actin knocks off ADP
* power stroke w/o ADP, myosin bends myosin bend pulls actin
* detachment ATP binds to myosin head breaks bond with actin
* “cocking” of myosin heads ATP ( ADP + P ADP extends myosin
* repeats
* some myosin always in contact with actin
* cycle repeats several times – pulling actin further
* 1 power stroke shortens muscle about 1%
* muscles shorten ~ 30 – 35 % of their resting length
* continues as long as Ca++ and ATP present
Neuromuscular junction
* = motor neuron + muscle fiber
* control cell = neuron axon terminal
* neurotransmitter acetylcholine (Ach)
* transport synapse
* target cell (post-synaptic cell) muscle
* motor end plate sarcolemma at synapse
* receptors for Ach
* action potential sarcolemma
Neuromuscular excitation
* GOAL: sarcomere contraction
* Muscle vs Nerve :
* NT depolarizes target cell
* effect of action potential:
* target cell = nerve NT release
* target cell = muscle Ca from sarcoplasmic reticulum
Sarcolemma
* polarized + outside / - inside
* Na channels
* chemically-gated at motor end plate
* voltage-gated sarcolemma, T-tubules
* receptors for Ach motor end plate only
Sarcolemma acts like an axon
* polarized at rest + outside / - inside Na / K
* Ach opens Na ligand-gated channel
* nature wants ?
* depolarization + in / - ouside
* Na+ inside opens voltage-gated Na channels
* action potential entire sarcolemma and T-tubules same as axon
action potential causes calcium release
* T-tubules next to terminal cisternae
* T tubules depolarize
* Na+ inside opens voltage gated Ca channels in SR
* sarcoplasmic reticulum releases Ca++
excitation-contraction coupling – short version
* neuron stim sarcolemma
* action potential
* Ca released
* sarcomere shortens
excitation-contraction coupling
* neuron depolarizes
* depolarization reaches axon terminal
* rush of Ca++ into axon terminal
* Ca++ causes release of Acetylcholine into synapse
* Ach binds with receptors on motor endplate
* Ach opens ligand-gated Na channels
* Na+ inside opens voltage-gated Na+
* action potential along sarcolemma and T-tubules
*
* Na+ inside causes sarcoplasmic reticulum to release Ca++
* Ca++ binds to troponin
* pulls tropomyosin off actin
* actin and myosin bind cross bridge
* myosin bends power stroke
* sarcomere shortens
How do you stop this darn thing?
* Acetylcholinesterase destroys Ach at motor end plate
* Na channels close
* sarcolemma repolarizes
* Na+ - K+ pump
* Ca++ pump Ca++ into SR via active transport
* troponin and tropomyosin cover actin
* ATP - detachment
* myosin extends
* sarcomere lengthens
ATP uses
* Na pump
* Ca pump
* break myosin and actin bond
Motor unit
* motor neuron + muscle cells it stimulates
* 1 neuron has several branches of its axon
* strength of contraction
* more motor units = stronger contraction of muscle
* recruitment
* control of movements
* small motor units (4-10) fine control fingers
* large motor units (100) poor control thigh
* alternation
one stimulus
* twitch = single contraction due to a single stimulus
* 3 parts:
* latent period time from excitation to contraction no change in myogram ~ 3 ms
* contraction begin contraction to max. force myogram increases ~ 10-100 ms
* relaxation myogram decreases ~ 10-100 ms sarcomere relaxes
myogram
* recording of muscle activity
* tension , not voltage
* muscles vary in speed and length of twitch size of motor unit
repeated stimuli
* graded response = varied strength of contraction
* number of motor units
* wave summation repeat stim w/o full relaxation
* 2nd twitch is a stronger contraction (summed)
* increased Ca++ available
* tetanus: smooth, sustained contraction normal muscle contraction
stronger stimuli
* motor unit summation = recruitment
* in vivo: more neurons
* lab: more electricity (mV)
* threshold stimulus
* minimum stim to cause contraction
* maximal stimulus
* strongest stim that increases force of contraction
* all motor units recruited
muscle tone
* muscle tone slight, constant contraction of all skeletal muscles
* posture
* stabilize joints
* heat production
treppe
* treppe “warming up”
* gradual increase strength of 1st few contractions
* increase Ca++ and enzyme activity
length - strength
* resting length vs strength
* ideal resting length
* 80 – 120 % of resting length
* too short
* sarcomeres already short
* too long
* actin and myosin too far away
force of muscle contraction
* affected by:
* recruitment
* size of muscle fibers
* wave summation (frequency)
* muscle length
types of muscle contraction
* muscle tension force
* load weight of object (bone)
* isometric contraction tension w/o movement
* isotonic contraction tension w/ movement
* concentric tension while shortening
* eccentric tension while lengthening
Energy production
* stored ATP 3 – 4 seconds
* creatine phosphate (CP) 10 – 15 sec
* creatine-P + ADP ( creatine + ATP CPK
* new ATP:
* glycolysis = anaerobic respiration
* fastest, but only 2 ATP made
* strenuous activity 30 – 40 sec
* when decreased O2 and blood flow
* lactic acid
* aerobic respiration = cell respiration
* glucose + O2 ( ATP + CO2 + H2O + heat
* 36 ATP made
* mild, or prolonged activity
fuel for ATP
* fatty acids main source at rest
* glycogen stored in muscle moderate to heavy exercise
* glucose blood minimal source in muscle
* pyruvic acid liver converted lactic acid replaces ATP after exercise
* oxygen myoglobin hemoglobin
effects of ATP use
* fatigue low ATP lactic acid - low pH inhibits enzymes inability to contract
* contractures lack ATP can’t detach cross-bridges decrease blood flow
* Oxygen debt replace O2 stored in myoglobin O2 for lactic acid ( pyruvic acid increased respiratory rate
* decreased pH CO2 , lactic acid
* increase body temp
types of skeletal muscle fibers
* slow oxidative fibers (type I)
* aerobic (cell respiration)
* myoglobin ; mitochondria (red)
* slow , prolonged contraction
* little fatigue
* fast glycolytic fibers (type II x)
* anaerobic
* little myoglobin or mitochondria (pale)
* fast contraction ; quick fatigue
* fast oxidative fibers (type II a) (pink)
* intermediate speed, strength, and fatigue
Exercise
* endurance exercise aerobic
* increase mitochondria , myoglobin , capillaries
* slow, oxidative fibers
* less fatigue
* no increase mass
* resistance exercise
* increase myofibrils , not # muscle cells = hypertrophy
* stores glycogen
* split ends theory
* atrophy
* disuse
* nerve damage
homeostatic responses to exercise
* vasodilation increase O2 , glucose remove CO2
* increase heart rate same
* increase respiration remove CO2 , raise pH remove heat repay oxygen debt
* acid-base mechanisms remove H+ , raise pH
* sweat decrease body heat
* thirst replace water loss
smooth muscle
* no sarcomeres
* network of sliding thick and thin filaments
* Ca++ stim sliding
* SR and caveoli (pouch of extracellular Ca++)
* gap junctions
* no fatigue slow contraction low ATP requirement
* neural stim acetylcholine norepinephrine α ß
* other controls hormones O2 , CO2 , pH histamine , paracrines
cardiac muscle
* see heart chapter
diseases
* Muscular Dystrophy
* myasthenia gravis
* atrophy
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