Muscle Mechanics and Physiology Flashcards
What is the relationship between force generated and attached crossbridges?
the more crossbridges that are attached, the more force will be generated
How does the CNS control muscle force?
activates motor units, not whole muscles or individual muscle fibers
Why do muscles inherently want to shorten?
due to the structure of the sarcomere and the orientation of the myosin heads
generating force when the muscle is lengthening is the easiest way to get injuring
What is the process of muscle activation?
nerve impulse goes down from the brain to the spinal chord
motor neuron signal reaches muscle in about 10 ms
in adult stage, it is 1 neuron to 1 muscle cell
depolarization travels down into the T-tubules
release of calcium and activates the actin-myosin apparatus
What are the two components of the S1 myosin head?
one for binding to actin and hydrolysing ATP
another acts as a “lever” arm that makes the actual movement
Describe the main stages of the crossbridge cycle.
1) ATP binding allows actin-myosin disassociation
2) hydrolysis of ATP swings the head to the next attachment site
4) the power stroke is associated with the release of ADP+Pi
What is the relationship between a motor neuron AP and the muscle it innervates?
on emotor neuron innervates one motor unit and all of the muscle fibers in that unit
a single action potential produces a single, simultaneous twitch in each of its muscle fibers
How does the speed of movement of filaments affact for generation?
the higher the speed of sliding the mor likely that attached cross-bridges will be broken by this movement
consequently, the faster the movement, the fewer attached cross-bridges and the less force produced
How does the speed of the cross-bridge cycle interact with the speed of filament sliding in movement?
the faster the myosin can make an attachment, the more cross bridges attached at a given movement speed, which increases force generated
cycle speed mainly depends on the various isozymes of myosin
What are the factors tht determine the number of attached cross bridges?
force-stimulus frequency (F-f)
force-length (F-L)
force-velocity (F-V)
How does muscle stimulus frequency affect the force generated?
average force increases as the number of motorneuron APs per time increases, resulting in a function that increases to a maximum force
How does the length of a muscle affect the force generated?
peak optimal overlap to generate the most force and a drop off on either side due to the number of cross-bridges that can be formed
alteration in filament overlap is a consequence of different limb positions
ex. an elastic spring - stiffness is an increase in force for an increase in length
How does the speed of filament movement affect the force generated?
the number of attached cross bridges depend on the speed of the movement versus the speed of the myosin ATPase
force is decreased with shortening and increased with lengthening
alteration in speed of filament movement is due to the speed of limb movements
ex. a dashpot or shock absorber - viscosity is a decrease in force for an increase in velosity, viscosity gives damping or smoothing of movement
passive stiffness
stiffness generated by the tinin molecules that join the m lines and z lines together
with with the connective tissue that surrounds muscle fibers and muscles, these structures generate a passive elastic force
series elasticity
stiffness contributed by the tendons