Smooth and Cardiac Muscle Flashcards
Describe cardiac muscle cells
Fibres have central nuclei, have desmosomes and gap junctions (connect cells electrically)
How do cardiac cells display electrical coupling?
Gap junctions allow propagation of action potentials between cells
Outline the process of cardiac muscle contraction
1) Depolarisation (sodium influx) causes voltage-gated calcium channels to open
2) Calcium affects troponin in sarcomere –> contraction
3) Calcium released from sarcomere and taken back into SR by SERCA –> diastole
4) Rise in intracellular calcium triggers further calcium release from SR (ryanodine receptor)
What type of calcium channel is present on cardiac cells?
L-type
Define ‘automaticity’
Ability to initiate their own beat (cells)
How does the sympathetic nervous system affect cardiac muscle?
Noradrenaline –> B1 adrenoreceptor –> increase HR and contraction force
How does the parasympathetic nervous system affect cardiac muscle?
ACh –> M2 receptors –> decreased HR
Describe the structure of smooth muscle
Covered by oblique loose lattice of thick and thin filaments, dense bodies (attachment for thick/thin filaments) and mechanical attachments and gap junctions
What are the two types of smooth muscle?
Multi unit and single unit smooth muscle
Describe multi-unit smooth muscle
Each smooth muscle cell contracts independently - fine control and gradual responses e.g. intrinsic eye muscles
Describe single-unit smooth muscle
SM cell spreads action potential via gap junctions to form functional syncytium –> slow and steady contractions
What is a ‘varicosity’?
Where the ANS makes contact with smooth muscle cells
What do varicosities do?
Release neurotransmitter into space surrounding muscle when innervated by autonomic post-ganglionic fibres
How can intracellular calcium level rise be generated?
Depolarisation (opens voltage-gated Ca2+ channels) or agonist of PLC which secretes IP3 which triggers Ca2+ release from SR
Describe the role of calcium in smooth muscle contraction
Calcium influx –> binds to calmodulin –> binds to myosin light-chain kinase (MLCK) –> phosphorylates regulatory region of myosin light chains –> increases ATPase activity of myosin -> allows myosin head to group and undergo cross-bridge cycling (contraction)