7.2 Flashcards
Describe the structure of a myofibril
Long tubes of sarcomeres linked together, made of myosin and actin
Describe the structure of a sarcomere
One small section of a myofibril between two consecutive Z lines, with a centre m line. Contains parallel myosin and actin filaments.
Explain the role of calcium ions in muscle contraction
Calcium ions are released by sarcoplasmic reticulum (Ca2+ channels open) , to increase calcium concentration.
The ions bond to troponin, which then releases tropomyosin from the actin strands, allowing myosin heads to bind to the troponin and cause the overlap of the filaments
Describe the sequence of events from the arrival of a nerve impulse at the neuromuscular junction to the contraction of the muscle
- a nerve impulse reaches a neuromuscular junction
- the impulse causes the sarcoplasmic reticulum to release Ca ions into muscle
- Ca ions bind to troponin, unblocking the tropomyosin and exposing actin binding sites
- ATP binds to myosin, which is broken down to ADP and Pi, causing myosin heads to “cock” to high energy position
- myosin binds to actin to form a cross bridge
- myosin heads then move to low energy position, using a power stroke to pull the actin filaments, and then release ADP and Pi
Explain what would need to happen in order to get a muscle to relax following contraction
Ca concentration should decrease, to allow tropomyosin to recover the actin binding sites and prevent myosin and actin binding together, allowing muscle to naturally stretch back to relaxed length