AUTO - B. SKELETAL MUSCLE-COVERED Flashcards
Skeletal muscle
- large cells extend length of muscle (smaller cells fused together, specialised junctions to get calcium into skeletal muscle)
- multiple nuclei
- no gap junctions as don’t need to talk to neighbouring cell and whole cell contracts to move muscle
- myosin and actin
- actin connected to Z lines
- Troponin/tropomyosin complex
Cardiac muscle
- small cells so don’t need special junction to get calcium into cell
- single nuclei
- connected by gap junctions to communicate with each other to get unified contraction
- myosin and actin
- actin connected to Z-lines
- Troponin/tropomyosin complex
Smooth muscle
- small cells so don’t need special junction to get calcium into cell
- single nuclei
- connected by gap junctions to communicate with each other to get unified contraction
- myosin and actin
- actin connected to dense bodies
- no Troponin/tropomyosin complex
what is contraction dependent on in cardiac and skeletal muscle
troponin C - tropomyosin complex
calcium binding to troponin C
confirmation changes in proteins, tropomyosin moves and uncovers actin binding site to allow myosin to bind to actin
*smooth muscle: need phosphorylation of myosin head domain to allow myosin to interact with actin
what is a motor unit
- single myelinated axon coming out of axon that can be 1 metre in length
- branches close to targets
- allows 1 motor neurone to control many muscle fibres at 1 time
- nerve fibre ends in neuromuscular junction
what factors affect muscle force contraction
- size (cross-sectional area)
- frequency of stimulation (force of contraction increases with increased freq of APs)
*skeletal muscle can’t maintain tension
would get lockjaw (tetanus) - botulinum toxin
manipulation of neuromuscular transmission
- neuromuscular blockade (paralysis/muscle relaxation)
- acute procedures: dislocations
- surgery
- cosmetic: botox
- movement disorders: tics
- increases function
- myasthenia graves: muscle weakness due to NMJ dysfunction (autoantibodies against NMJ receptor so can’t activate it as well and get weakness)
Non-depolarising NM blockers
nACh-R antagonists
eg - atracurium, vecuronium
- block NM transmission - paralysis
- block post-synaptic nACh receptors
- block = competitive
- 3-5 mins onset, 30+ min duration = good for surgery as prevents transmission and muscle contracting
- not preceded by stimulation ie no contraction
- block antagonised by agents that depolarise muscle membrane or increase ACh release
- block reversed by anticholineesterases (acetylcholine esterase inhibitor)
can overcome antagonism through agonist - ACh
can increase antagonist by preventing break dose of ACh - acetylcholine esterase inhibitor
competes with antagonist
Depolarising blockers
nACh-R agonists
ie - mimic ACh/nicotine
eg - suxamethonium, decamethonium
- persistent activation of nACh-R causes inactivation of voltage-gated Na channels
- can no longer open in response to brief depolarisation
- block preceded by muscle twitches
- activate receptor for longer
Botox (Botulinum toxin Type A)
- blocks ACh release - paralysis
- produced by clostridium botulinum (part of toxin)
- destroys SNARE proteins involved in vesicular docking and ACh release
- 10 molecules enough to block a synapse
- long-term action
- irons out wrinkles
- tics
- eye twitch
- excessive sweating
Myaesthenia gravis
- autoimmune disorder of NM transmission
- autoantibodies against nicotinic ACh-R which decrease activation and lack of contraction in skeletal muscle
- muscle weakness
- inability to prolong muscle contraction
- ptosis = droopy upper eyelid
- increase ACh in end plate
- short-acting anticholineesterase (for diagnosis), Edrophonium
- long-acting anti cholinesterase, Neostigmine, Pyridostigmine