Muscle contraction Flashcards
Nerve impulses elicit a muscle action potential in the following way:
- Release of acetylcholine
- Activation of ACh receptors
- Production of muscle action potential
- Termination of ACh activity
Contraction cycle consists of 4 steps:
- ATP hydrolysis
- Formation of cross-bridges
- Power stroke
- Detachment of myosin from actin
Maximum amount of muscle tension achieved =
strength of stimulus increases and frequency of action potentials increase - more and more alpha neurons are activated
Minimal stimulus =
minimal # of alpha motor neurons = small amount of muscle tension
Production of ATP in muscle fibers:
- Huge amount of ATP is needed to:
- Power the contraction cycle
- Pump Ca++ into the SR
sources of ATP in muscle
PCr: creatine phosphate (seconds) 10-15 seconds
glycolytic: anaerobic glycolysis (minutes)
Aerobic: oxidative phosphorylation (hours)
*uses gluclose!
Creatine phosphate
- Excess ATP is used to synthesize creatine phosphate
- Energy-rich molecule - Creatine phosphate transfers its higher energy phosphate group to ADP regenerating new ATP
- Creatine phosphate and ATP provide enough energy for contraction for about 15 seconds
Anaerobic respiration
- ATP producing reactions do not require oxygen
- Glucose is used to generate ATP when the supply of creatine phosphate is depleted
Aerobic respiration
- Myoglobin and hemoglobin are oxygen binding proteins
- supplies ATP for prolonged activity
- Provides <90% of the needed ATP in activities lasting more than 10 minutes
- Muscle tissue has 2 source of O2: hemoglobin and myoglobin
muscle fatigue
- Results in cramping due to complete loss of ATP molecules (break the bonds between actin and myosin)
- Buildup of lactic acid causes muscle soreness but lowers pH (increased H+). the pain of pH and pH changes affects “central fatigue” not in specific muscle
- 40% of energy released is use for work
The _________ are an invagination in the muscle cell’s sarcolemma.
a. Sarcoplasmic reticulum
b. Transverse T tubules
c. Cisternae
d. Microtubules
transverse T tubules
Which of the following best describes the action potential of skeletal muscle upon stimulation?
a. It spreads inward to all parts of the muscle via the T-tubules
b. Is has prolonged plateau phase
It causes immediate uptake of Ca2+ into the lateral sacs of SR
c. It is longer than the action potential of cardiac muscle
d. It is not essential for contraction
a. it spreads inward to all parts of the muscle via T-tubules
Which of the following is the most durable source of energy during exercise?
a.Anaerobic respiration
b. Aerobic respiration
c. ADP and creatine phosphate in the cell
b. aerobic respiration
Muscles get fatigued due to accumulation of
a. Lactic acid
b. ATP
c.CO2
d. glycogen
a. lactic acid
cardiac muscle
- contracts when stimulated by its own autorhythmic muscle fibers
- Enables coordinated contraction