5.5.16 The Sliding Filament Model Flashcards
1
Q
Structure of filaments in myofibril
A
- Thick filaments made of myosin
- Fibrous protein
- Globular head
- Fibrous part of myosin anchors molecule
- Globular heads point away from M line
- Thin filaments made of actin
- Globular proteins
- Link forming a chain
- 2 actin chains twist forming 1 thin filament
- Fibrous protein tropomyosin twisted around actin chain
- Troponin attached to actin chain
2
Q
How does muscle contraction occur?
A
- Action potential arrives at neuromuscular junction
- Calcium ions released from sarcoplasmic reticulum into sarcoplasm by diffusion
- Calcium ions bind to troponin molecules stimulating them to change shape
- Troponin and tropomyosin changes position on actin filament
- Myosin binding sites exposed on actin molecule
- Globular heads of myosin molecule bind with these sites forming cross bridges between the 2 filaments
- Myosin heads bend and pull actin filament towards centre of sarcomere, causing muscle to contract a small distance
- ADP released
- ATP binds to myosin head letting it detach from actin
- Myosin head acts as ATPase enzyme, hydrolysing ATP into ADP and Pi
- Energy released during this allows myosin head to return to original position
- Myosin head now binds to site on actin filament closer to Z line
- Myosin head moves again pulling actin filaments even closer to centre of sarcomere and causing sarcomere to shorten further
- As long as troponin and tropomyosin are not blocking myosin binding sites, and the muscle has a supply of ATP, the process repeats til muscle is fully contracted
3
Q
What is the role of ATP ?
A
- ATP binding allows myosin to detach from actin
- ATP hydrolysis lets myosin heads return to original position
- Return of calcium ions back to sarcoplasmic reticulum occurs via active transport
4
Q
What is the role of phosphocreatine?
A
- Resting muscle only has small amount of ATP stored only lasting 3-4 seconds of intense exercise
- Mitochondria present in muscle fibres respire aerobically to produce ATP but is slow
- Anaerobic respiration is faster but takes 10 seconds before it produces ATP
- PHOSPHOCREATINE stored in muscles can rapidly produce ATP
- Phosphate ion transferred to ADP
- ADP + phosphocreatine = ATP + Creatine
- Lets muscles recontract for short period of time until mitochondria can resupply ATP