Myology Flashcards
Give an overview of the function of muscle
Maintain posture
Enable movement
Vasoconstriction and vasodilation
Peristalsis
Cardiac motion
Heat generation 75% of ATP energy used in muscle contraction is released as heat
Stabilise joints
Give an overview of skeletal muscles
Voluntary control
Striated
Multiple peripheral nuclei
Is long and cyclindrical in appearance
Attaches to bone
Muscle fibres contract independently
Well developed sarcoplasmis reticulum and transverse tubules
Mainly fast twitch muscle fibres
Give an overview of cardiac muscle
Involuntary contraction
Stratified
Uninuclie located in the centre of the cell
Branches
Intercalated disks allows action potential to pass along fibres
Moderately developed sarcoplasmic reticulum and transverse tubules
Mainly slow twitch muscle fibres
Give an overview of smooth muscle
Not striated - more actin than myosin,
Involuntary control
Elliptical in shape
Uninucleus in the centre of the cell
Poorly developed sarcoplasmic reticulum and transverse tubules.
Gap junctions are generally present
Maintains rone without nervous stimulation, visceral smooth muscle does have pacemaker potential
Are mainly slow twitch muscle fibres
What is the epimysium?
The outer layer of connective tissue covering the whole muscle
What is a muscle fasicle?
A bundle of muscle fibres surround3 by perimysium
What is a muscle fibre?
An individual muscle cell or myocyte, surrounded by endomysium.
Contains myofibrils
What are myofibrils ?
Composed of actin and myosin make up a myofilament.
What is the hierarchy of muscle structure?
Muscle
Muscle fasicle
Muscle fibre or myocyte
Myofibrils
Myofilament
What is the locational relationship between transverse tubules and the sarcoplasmic reticulum?
A transverse tubule sits in between two sarcoplasmic reticulum’s. Together they are known as a triad
There is no physical connection between the two but the close proximity allows the t tubule to strand the action potential between sarcoplasmic reticulums.
What is meant by terminal Cristae?
The fusion of the sarcoplasmic reticulum near the t tubules
What is the importance of a z disk in muscle structure?
Z disks are filamentous proteins.
Marks the boundaries of a sarcomere
What are the different bands within a sarcomere?
H band is myosin only
A band is the dark band containing myosin and actin
I band is the light band containing actin only
The M line is the middle of the sarcomere
What is the role of titin?
A filamentous molecule that keeps actin and myosin in place
Attaches myosin to the z disks
Prevents from over contracting
Found in skeletal and cardiac muscle ??
Describe the structure of an actin filament?
G actin molecules clump together to form a F actin chain
This is a double stranded chain
There is one ADP molecule or active site per G actin
F actin inserts into the z disc
What is tropmyosin?
A protein component of actin.
Wraps around F actin chains like a spiral
Covers the active sites
What is troponin?
Part of the actin complex
Is a circular molecule with three compartments
C for calcium attachment
T for tropomyosin attachment
I for strong affinity to actin hence inhibiting the contraction
Describe the structure of myosin.
The tail of myosin is made up of two heavy chains wrapped around each other in an alpha helix shape.
Each heay chain then splits and folds to form a globular polypeptide head each
Each head is also associated wih two light chains (four light chains in total)
The heads control the function during muscle contraction
What is the significance of M proteins and myosmesin?
Bind to the mid point of the myosin molecules make up the M line
What other proteins are associated with actin?
Not troponin of tropomyosin
a-actinin dimers - anchor to actin polymers to form the Z line
Nebulin - anchored to actinin at the Z line, extends along each F actin molecule
Tropomoduline - capps the end of each actin, away from the Z line, caps the length of the actin molecule
Myotilin - helps anchor actin the the z disk
All help stabilise actin and control its length