ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY - Muscle Flashcards
What is the function of skeletal muscle?
Skeletal muscle is attached to the bones and supports the movement of the skeleton
Is skeletal muscle under voluntary or involuntary control?
Skeletal muscle is under voluntary control
Are skeletal muscle fibres syncytial?
No, skeletal muscle fibres and not syncytial and thus cannot have a rapid coordinated contraction
(T/F) Skeletal muscle fibres (cells) run in parallel along the length of the muscle itself
TRUE
Why are skeletal muscle fibres (cells) non-dividing cells?
Because skeletal muscle cells are multinucleated cells so cannot undergo normal cell division
Why are the nuclei of skeletal muscle fibres found in the periphery of the cell?
Because the myofibrils within the cells take up most of the space, pushing the nuclei into the periphery
Explain the process that leads to skeletal muscle cells (fibres) being multinucleated
In utero development, mononucleated myoblasts (embryonic muscle precursors) fuse together to form multi-nucleated skeletal muscle cells
What is the structure that surrounds skeletal muscle fibres (i.e. the cell membrane)?
Salcolemma which is made up of an inner plasmalemma and outer basement membrane
What is the most abundant organelle found in the skeletal muscle fibre which allows skeletal muscle contraction to occur?
Myofibrils
Describe the structures that make up thick filaments in skeletal muscle
Thick filaments are made up of myosin molecules arranged in myosin tails and myosin heads. These myosin heads have an actin binding site and an ATPase binding site
When muscle is at rest, which angle are the myosin heads to the myosin tails?
90 degrees to the longitudinal axis of the myosin tails
Describe the structure of thin filaments in skeletal muscle?
Actin helix which has a tropomyosin molecule running along the helix, attached by troponin. The actin has a myosin binding site that in the relaxed state is covered by tropomyosin
How are thick and thin filaments arranged within the myofibrils of skeletal muscle?
Thick and thin filaments are arranged in repeated sarcomeres along the longitudinal axis of the muscle fibres (cells)
Which structures support the thick and thin filaments within the sarcomere arrangement?
M line: structural protein supporting the thick filaments within the sarcomere arrangement
Z line: structural protein supporting the thin filaments within the sarcomere arrangement
Skeletal muscle contraction is a voluntary response mediated by ________
A signal from the brain transferred along somatic efferent (motor) neurones to each individual skeletal muscle cell via the neuromuscular junction
What is the neuromuscular junction?
The neuromuscular junction is the synaptic connection between the terminal end of a somatic neuron and a skeletal muscle cell
Describe how a signal from the brain is transferred from the terminal end of a somatic efferent neurone to a skeletal muscle cell via the neuromuscular junction
- An action potential travels down the axon to the axon terminal of the somatic efferent neurone
- This acton potential triggers the opening of voltage gated Ca2+ channels within the membrane of the somatic neurone, causing an influx of Ca2+
- The influx of Ca2+ stimulates synaptic vesicles to release acetylcholine into the synaptic cleft
- Acetylcholine binds to receptors located on the membrane of the skeletal muscle cell
- This triggers the opening of ligand gates Na+ channels, triggering end plate potential which bring the membrane up to threshold to stimulate an action potential