P: Smooth muscle Flashcards
Describe the structure of smooth muscle
No sarcomeres
No troponin
Lots of myosin, caldesmon, calponin (tonically inhibit actin-myosin interaction)
No t-tubules, instead caveolae
Thick filament regulated
Function of dense bodies
Link smooth muscle together
Types of smooth muscle
Single unit (visceral)
Multi-unit
Features of smooth muscle
Single unit has many gap junctions - pacemaker activity
NMJ of smooth muscle not as structured as skeletal muscle
Multiunit has few gap junctions – nerve stimulation required
Both types regulated by ANS not somatic N
What kind of calcium channels does smooth muscle have
Voltage gated
Ligand gated
Stretch activated
Smooth muscle contraction/ relaxation
Excitation of the muscle via AP, hormone, mechanical stimulus etc
Increase in cytosolic Ca2+ (ECF and SR)
Calmodulin activates MLCK (myosin light chain kinase) –> cross bridge formation
Increase in activity of Myosin ATPase with cross-bridge formed
Contraction of muscle
MLCK dephosphorylated by MP (myosin phosphatase)
Relaxation of Muscle
Ca2+ homeostasis restored
How is force regulated with tonic smooth muscle
- Slows rate of cross-bridge cycling
- Increased sensitivity to calcium by decreasing activity of MP (myosin phosphatase) and increasing activity of MLCK
- Sustained tonic activity (latch state) allows for less ATP consumed.
Single unit smooth muscle
- Visceral organs
- Pacemaker activity + cells electronically coupled via gap junctions
Multiunit smooth muscle
- Not electrically coupled –> controlled by nerve signals
- Individual muscle fibres may be stimulated by individual nerve fibres
- Important for fine control of these muscles
Phasic contraction vs tonic contraction:
Phasic - intermittent contraction
Tonic - continuously contracting
Regulation of SR Calcium in smooth muscle
- Neurotransmitter/ chemical binds to G protein
- Phospholipase C (PLC) converts PIP2 into Inositol tri-phosphate (IP3)
- Stimulates calcium release from SR
Why is the lack of sarcomeres important for the mechanism of contraction in smooth muscle
Muscle must often contract when already contracted
What links smooth muscle cells
Dense bodies
What is poorly developed in smooth muscle
SR, therefore extracellular Ca++ is very important together with SR Ca+
What is calmodulin
Ca++ binding protein that activates MLCK