20 - Muscle Function and Disease Flashcards
What is the similarities and differences between cardiac and smooth muscle contraction?
Similarities
- Act as syncitium
- Communicate through gap junctions (intercalated disc)
- Nuclei central not peripheral
- Act as syncitium
- Have one contractile cell type (not 3 like skeletal)
Differences
- Smooth muscle has no sarcomeres
- No troponins in smooth
- Cardiac is electrical conduction
What is a kranocyte?
- Resides over Schwann cell and produces collagen to make membrane over whole neuromuscular junction
- Anchors nerve to muscle cell
- Keeps neurotransmitter in one area so doesnt affect neighboroughing muscle cells
How does skeletal muscle contract (5 stages)?
- Activation
- Calcium ion mobilisation
- Energy production and fibril contraction
- Ratcheting
- Rest
Explain in detail how the events leading to skeletal muscle contraction?
- Nerve impulse at pre-synaptic neurone
- Vesicles fuse with membrane and release Ach into synaptic cleft
- Ach binds to nicotinic receptor, depolarises membrane by voltage gated Na channels opening and Na entering cell. AchE breaks down Ach to stop continous action potentials
- Depolarisation spreads in t-tubules and causes Ca ion channels to open which causes ryanodine receptors to be activated and release calcium from SER, calcium spark
- Influx of calcium into cytoplasm, which binds to troponin, allowing tropomyosin to move and actin-myosin cross bridges to be formed
- Contraction, power strokes
- Ca release channels close and SERCA moves calcium back out, or PMCA, or mitochondria
- Troponin-tropomyosin slides back over acting so no more actin myosin cross bridges
- Muscle relaxes
What is the structure of a thin filament?
Globular actin and Troponin complex
- Two troponin for every tropomyosin twist.
- Troponin-Tropomyosin block actin binding sites
(can have fibrous actin)
What is the structure of a thick filament?
- Many myosin
- Multiple heads protuding in all directions
What is special about the M section of the sarcomere?
- Myosins have no heads so contraction cannot occur
What is troponin made up of?
I, T, C
What happens first when there is an influx of calcium in the cytoplasm?
- Binds to TnC and causes a conformational change of tropomyosin
- Moves tropomyosin out of the actin binding site into clefts of G-actin spheres
- Myosin can bind to actin
Explain the sliding filament theory
- Calcium binds to troponin-tropomyosin complex and causes actin binding site to be exposed
- Myosin head, that has already been energised by ATP, binds to actin to form cross bridge
- Head tilts towards M-line in a power stroke by release of ADP and Pi, causing actin to slide over myosin
- Myosin dissociates by ATP binding and returns to original position and is reenergised by ATP hydrolysis to form another cross bridge
- Lots of cross bridges causes sarcomere to shorten
- Continues as long as there is sufficient Ca and ATP
When a muscle contracts what happens to the sarcomere?
Z lines get closer together so sarcomere shortens
How does sarcomere return to normal length after calcium is removed?
- Antagonist muscles
- Titin
- Gravity
What is a calcium spark?
Release of calcium from sarcoplasmic reticulum
What is the origin and insertion of a muscle?
What are the five muscle roles?
1. Antagonist: Prime mover
2. Antagonist: Opposite to prime mover
3. Synergist: Assist prime mover
4. Neutraliser: prevent unwanted actions of agonist
5. Fixator: hold one body part still whilst other moves
What are the three types of levers in the human body?
How are muscles separated?
- Compartmentalised by thick dense fascia
- Muscles with similar actions grouped
- Anterior, posterior, lateral and medial
What are the four compartments of the lower leg?
What is compartment syndrome?
Pressure in a compartment as constrained by fascia, which can contrict nerves, lymph and blood vessels
- Can be caused by trauma such as internal bleeding
What are the signs of compartment syndrome?
- Oedema
- Shiny swallen skin
- Deep constant poorly localised pain
- Paraesthesia (nerve compression)
- Prolonged capillary refill time
- Tense and firm
- Passive stretch