Muscles Flashcards
Describe the structure of a myosin protein
Bulbous head
Tail
Quaternary structure - two proteins held together
What do the two binding site on the myosin head bind to ?
Actin
ATP
Name the ion that binds to troponin
Calcium ions
Name the protein that covers the myosin binding sites when the muscle is not contracting
Tropomyosin
What is the name of the theory that explain muscle contraction
Sliding filament theory
Name the two types of filament involved in the sliding filament theory
Myosin and actin
Describe the role of ATP in muscle contraction
Attachment of ATP on myosin head causes myosin to detach from actin.
Hydrolysis of ATP (on myosin head) causes myosin to re-cock
Describe the role of calcium ions in muscle contraction
Calcium ions diffuse into myofibrils from sacoplasmic reticulum
Bind to troponin
Tropmyosin moves to reveal myosin binding sites
Myosin heads attach to binding sites on actin
Describe the role of glycogen in skeletal muscle
Hydrolysed to form glucose
Respired to release ATP
Name the connection that forms when myosin binds to actin
Actinomyosin bridge
Name three types of muscle found in the body and state where they are located.
Cardiac - exclusively in the heart
Smooth- walls of blood vessels and intestine
Skeletal - attached to bones by tendons
What does the term ‘antagonistic pair’ means in terms of muscles.
Muscles act in pairs to pull ketone in opposite directions
Describe the gross structure of the skeletal muscle
Muscle cells fused together to form bundles of parallel muscle fibres (myofibrils)
Describe the microscopic structure of skeletal muscle
Myofibrils - site of contraction
Sarcoplasm - shared nuclei and cytoplasm with lots of mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum
Sarcolemma - cell membrane folds inwards to form T tubules
Describe how an action potential is transmitted to the muscle cells at a neuromuscular junction
Action potential arrives at junction.
Calcium ion channels open and calcium ions diffuse into the pre-synaptic knob
Vesicles move towards and fuse with pre-synaptic membrane
Acetylcholine released and diffuses across synapse.
Acetylcholine binds to rector site on the muscle cell membrane (sarcolemma).
Sodium ions channels open causing depolarisation.