Muscular contraction Flashcards
What are the three muscle types?
Smooth muscle
Cardiac muscle
Skeletal muscle
What type of control is smooth muscle under control by?
Involuntary control from the autonomic nervous system
Describe the nucleation of smooth muscle
Mononucleated
Describe the nucleation of cardiac muscle
Mononucleated
How are cardiac cells connected?
Physically and electrically connected, ensuring that contraction signals are transmitted through cells, and the entire heart contracts as a singe unit
What type of nervous control, controls cardiac muscles?
Autonomous (myogenic)
and under influence of autonomic nervous system (cardiac control centre)
What is the nucleation of skeletal muscles?
Multinucleate
Which type of control are skeletal muscles subjected to?
Voluntary control by the somatic nervous system
How are skeletal muscles attached to bone?
Attached via tendons, consequently facilitating movement of bone through contraction
What connective tissue sheath wraps muscle?
Epimysium
What is the purpose of the epimysium?
Enables muscle to contract and more powerfully while maintain structural integrity.
How are muscle fibres arranged?
Arranged in bundles, known as fascicles
Which connective tissue layer surrounds the fascicles?
Perimysium
How does the fascicular arrangement support muscular contraction?
Triggers specific movement of a muscle by activating a subset of muscle fibres within a fascicle of the muscle
What is contained within each fascicle?
Myofibres, encased in a thin layer of collagen and reticular fibres, the endomysium
Which layer surrounds the outer layer of each myofibre?
Endomysium
What does the endomysium contain?
Surrounds the extracellular matrix of cells, plays a role in transferring force produced by muscle fibres to tendons
What is the term used to describe the plasma membrane of myofibres?
Sarcolemma
What is the term used to define the cytoplasm of myofibres?
Sarcoplasm
Which proteins are spent in myofibrils?
Myosin and actin
What is the smallest functional unit of a skeletal muscle fibre?
Sarcomere
What are t tubules?
Extensions of the sarcolemma that penetrate into the centre of skeletal muscle cells, a conduit of action potentials
What is the role perfumed by the sarcoplasm?
Cytoplasm of myocyte consisting of greater proportion of glycogen granules, myoglobin and mitochondria
What is the sarcoplasmic reticulum?
Network of fluid-filled tubules, constitutes the main intracellular calcium store in striated muscle, cardinal role in the regulation of excitation-contraction coupling.