Lecture 31 Flashcards

1
Q

Length tension relationship:

A

At the level of the sarcomere the maximum active force (tension developed) is dependent on the degree of actin and myosin overlap`

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2
Q

At optimal length:

A

greatest tension produced due to maximum number of cross-bridges foremd

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3
Q

Decrease length:

A

reduces tension due to extensive overlap

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4
Q

No tension can form when:

A

Thick filaments meet Z lines are sarcomeres cannot shorten.

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5
Q

Reduced size of zone of overlap means:

A

fewer cross bridges formed and reduced tension

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6
Q

Zero zone of overlap results in:

A

zero tension due to no interactions between thick and thin filaments

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7
Q

Excitation-contraction coupling Part 1(the neuromuscular junction) step 1

A

-ACh is released into the neuromuscular junction, an AP travels down the motor neuron. Ca2+ enters the axon terminal. Vesicles containing ACh fuse with the terminal membrane, releasing ACh into the neuromuscular junction

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8
Q

Excitation-contraction coupling Part 1 step 2

A

Activation of ACh receptors:

  • After step 1, ligand gated ion channels open.
  • Opening of these channels allows movement of predominantly Na+ into the muscle cell making it less negative (end plate potential)
  • The effects of ACh are short lasting as the enzyme ACh esterase rapidly breaks down ACh
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9
Q

Excitation-contraction coupling Part 1 step 3:

A

If sufficient ligand gated channels are opened the end plate potential reaches threshold.

  • Voltage gated Na+ cahnnels open and an action potential is triggered
  • The action potential is then propagated along the sarcolemma into the T tubule system
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10
Q

An action potential in skeletal muscle (5 steps)

A
  1. Small increase in Na+ permeability
  2. Na+ channels open. Na+ rushes in. Cell is depolarized.
  3. Na+ channels close. K+ channels open. Cell begins repolarization.
  4. K+ channels begin closing.
  5. Membrane potential stabilizes at resting level. Concentrations of Na+ and K+ are restored.
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11
Q

Excitation-contraction coupling Part 2 (calcium coupling) step 4

A

-Calcium is released from the SR. Ca2+ channels in the SR open. Ca2+ is then released into the cytosol

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12
Q

Excitation-contraction coupling Part 2 (calcium coupling) step 5

A

When Ca2+ concentrations reach a critical threshold the myosin binding sites on the actin filament are exposed allowing the cross-bridge cycle to occur.

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13
Q

Excitation-contraction coupling Part 2 (calcium coupling) step 6

A

-Contraction ends when Ca2+ levels fall

  • Ca2+ is pumped back to SR via Ca2+-ATPase pumps
  • Troponin moves back covering the myosin binding site
  • The muscle twitch is complete
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14
Q

Creatine phosphate:

A
  • For brief periods creatine phosphate can act as an ATP ‘store’
  • Anaerobic
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15
Q

Anaerobic glycolysis:

A

fast but inefficient

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16
Q

Aerobic glycolysis

A

Efficient but slow

17
Q

Type 1 fibre:

A

slow oxidative, Slow ATPase rate, small diameter, aerobic, ‘slow twitch’

18
Q

Type 2B fibre: fast glycolytic

A

Fast, high, anaerobic glycolysis, ‘fast twitch’

19
Q

Type 2A fibre:

A

Fast, aerobic, ‘fast twitch’

20
Q

Regulation force is dependent on:

A

-Rate of simulation of individual motor units, the number of motor units recruited

21
Q

Rate of stimulation:

A

Single twitch, a single stimulus is delivered.

-Low of stimulation –> unfused (incomplete) tetanus

22
Q

Increased frequency=

A

temporal summation. At high frequencies, there is no relaxation at all between stimuli.