Muscle Flashcards
where is the sarcoplasmic reticulum located and what does it store
surrounds myofibrils
stores calcium ions
z lines
represents the boundary between 1 sarcomere and the next
m line
middle of a band
actin
thin
myosin
thick
A band
Dark- overlap both actin and myosin
I band
Light- Only actin
H Zone
Dark Area in middle only myosin
What happens to Z lines, A,I band and H zones during muscle contraction
A band unchanged
I,H bands shorten
Z lines become closer together
Sarcomere
Distance between 2 Z lines
role of tropomyosin in muscle contraction
- Moves out of the way when calcium ions bind;
2. Allowing myosin to bind (to actin)/crossbridge formation;
role myosin in muscle contraction
- Head (of myosin) binds to actin and moves/pulls/slides actin past;
- (Myosin) detaches from actin and re-sets/moves further along (actin)
- This uses ATP;
Why do fast muscle fibres have a high glycogen content
- (Glycogen broken down) gives (lots of) glucose for glycolysis/anaerobic respiration;
- Glycolysis/anaerobic respiration not very efficient/only yields 2 ATP per glucose;
Why do slow muscle fibres have many capliaries
- (Many capillaries) give high concentration/lots of oxygen/ shorter diffusion pathway for oxygen/large surface area for oxygen exchange/diffusion;
- Good glucose supply with little glycogen present;
- Allows high rate of/more aerobic respiration OR prevents build-up of lactic acid/(muscle) fatigue;
process that occurs after depolarisation that allows myosin head to bind
Relaxed muscle – tropomyosin Covering myosin binding sitesCa ions flood into muscle from the S-R after depolarisation Ca ions bind TROPONIN – this alters the shape of the T-T-A complexTROPOMYOSIN gets displaced and exposes (unblocks) MYOSIN BINDING SITES