Skeletal Muscle Structure and Function Flashcards
What are the functions of muscle?
Force production for locomotion, postural support, breathing, and heat production during cold stress.
Organization of muscle
muscle, fascicles, muscle fibers, myofibrils, myofilaments (actin and myosin).
What is the role of the connective tissue in muscle?
Connective tissue layers connect and transfer force to tendon which transfers force to bone
What are the 3 layers of connective tissue?
Epimysium: covers entire muscle
Perimysium: covers fascicles (bundles of fibers) and contains nerve and blood vessels.
Endomysium: covers individual muscle fibers.
What is the primary content in a muscle fiber?
Sarcolemma: membrane
Sarcoplasm: cytoplasm
Nuclei: contain many
Mitochondria: densely packed
What is the sarcoplasmic reticulum?
Serves as storage for calcium and surrounds each myofibril and runs parallel.
What is the smallest functional unit of muscle?
Sarcomere
Name the two principal contractile proteins (myofilaments) in skeletal muscle
Thin filament (actin)
Thick filament (myosin)
What is the neurotransmitter released at the neuromuscular junction?
Acetylcholine
What is the Excitation-contraction coupling sequence?
- Motor neuron stimulation of muscle fiber:
- Nerve impulse transmitted from cns to motor neuron toward the muscle fiber
- Release of Ach from motor neuron to nmj
- Ach binds to its receptor on the sarcolemma - Muscle fiber action potential:
- Action potential transmitted down T-tubules which leads to the release of calcium from sarcoplasmic reticulum. - Crossbridge cycling:
- Calcium binds to troponin pulling tropomyosin off binding site and myosin heads attach to the actin filament.
What is the process of muscle contraction (crossbridge cycle)?
- Reset: ATP on myosin head is hydrolyzed by myosin ATPase to ADP + Pi (energized)
- Attach: when motor nerve is stimulated, calcium is released and binds to troponin, tropomyosin moves, exposes myosin binding site on actin, energized myosin forms a strong bond with actin.
- Pull: ADP release causes head to relax while still bound to myosin which allows it to pull on actin (power stroke, shortens sarcomere)
- Release: a new ATP binds to myosin, allowing myosin to release from actin.
What is the role of myosin ATPase in the process of muscle contraction?
Each myosin head can move and bind actin when ATP is hydrolyzed by myosin ATPase.
What is the requirement of ATP for muscle contraction and relaxation?
Contraction: ATP is necessary to move the myosin head toward myosin.
Relaxation: binding of new ATP is necessary for the release of myosin from actin + calcium is actively pumped back into SR and ATP is required.
What are the types of muscle actions?
Isotonic (dynamic) contractions: muscle changes length and moves a load (force is greater than resistance)
Isometric (static) contractions: tension in the muscle increases but the muscle neither shortens nor lengthens (cross bridges form but actin is not moving and resistance is greater than force).
What is the motor unit organization/structure?
Consists of motor neurons together and all the muscle fibers it stimulates + multiple motor units support an individual muscle, not just one.
- Each muscle fiber is innervated by only 1 motor neuron.
- Not all motor units will be activated at the same time.