muscles iii Flashcards
What is Excitation Contraction coupling, generally?
The events from electrical stimulation of the sarcolemma leading up to contraction of muscle cells
Describe the receptors in the T-tubules
- Dihydropyridine receptors (DHP)
- voltage sensitive
- linked to calcium release channels in SR membrane (ryanodine receptors)
- AP causes shape change in DHP receptors which results in calcium outflow from SR into sarcoplasm
What does the calcium in the sarcoplasm do?
It binds to troponin which pulls tropomyosin off the myosin binding sites, allowing the myosin to pull on actin
what happens to the parts of the sarcomere during muscle contraction?
- z discs get closer together
- H zone gets smaller and can disappear
- A band and I band get smaller
4 Steps of Contraction with the Sliding Filament Model
- ATP hydrolysis = reorients and energizes myosin head
- Formation of crossbridge = myosin head attaches to myosin binding site
- Power stroke = myosin folds and cross bridge rotates towards center of sarcomere, sliding the filaments
- Detachment of myosin from actin = ATP binds to myosin head, causing it to let go of actin
How long does contraction cycle repeat?
until ATP is no longer available or calcium levels drop
ATP use during muscle contraction
- ATPase hydrolyzes ATP so that myosin head can bind
- ATP binds to myosin head to detach it
- ATPase pumps calcium into SR and out of axon terminal
- ATPase is used by sodium/potassium pump to reestablish the RMP of the sarcolemma
3 ways that muscle fibers make ATP
- creatine phosphate
- anaerobic cellular respiration
- aerobic cellular respiration
Creatine Phosphate metabolism
- excess ATP is used to synthesize creatine phosphate
- creatine phosphate transfers its high energy phosphate to ADP, making ATP
- creatine phosphate/ ATP provide enough energy for 15 secs of contraction
Anaerobic respiration in muscle cells
- Glucose is taken from the blood and from glycogen stored in muscle fibers
- Glycolysis breaks glucose into Pyruvic Acid –> 2 ATP
- Pyruvic acid is converted to lactic acid and taken away by blood
- provides energy for 30-40 seconds of muscle activity
Aerobic respiration
- Still uses glucose
- Pyruvic acid enters mitochondria and is oxidized, generating ATP, CO2, O2, H2O, and heat
- each glucose makes 36 (-38) ATP
- Muscles get oxygen from hemoglobin in blood and myoglobin in muscle cells (both bind oxygen)
- provides ATP for muscle activity > 30 secs
- 90% of ATP for > 10 min exercises
Muscle fatigue
-inability of muscle to maintain contraction after long activity
-Factors that contribute to muscle fatigue:
not enough calcium from SR
depletion of creatine phosphate
not enough oxygen
depletion of glycogen
buildup of lactic acid/ ADP
not enough Ach
Oxygen debt or Excess Postexercise Oxygen Consumption (EPOC)
- extra oxygen taken into body after exercise
- used to restore muscle cells in 3 ways:
1. converts lactic acid into glycogen
2. synthesizes creatine phosphate and ATP
3. replaces oxygen removed from myoglobin