Smooth Muscle Flashcards
Airway and blood vessel smooth muscle are examples of __ contractions.
Urinary bladder and intestinal smooth muscle are examples of __contractions.
Tonic contraction
Phasic contraction
Structural differences between smooth and skeletal muscle
Smooth muscle are single-nucleated and have a centrally placed nuceus.
How to skeletal muscles contract together? How do smooth muscles do it?
Skeletal muscle is organized into motor untis
Smooth muscle have gap junctions that span the membranes of 2 cells; also have structural juncitons between the cells that link them into a contractil eunit
While skeletal muscle is organized into striations aligned with the long axis of the cell, the contractile filaments of smooth muscle are arranged …
Diagnoally across the cell
Thinf ialments are connected to dense bodies (like the Z disc) which are linked by intermediate filaments
The process of crossbridge cycling is the same in skeletal and smooth muscles, but the mechanism by which calcium controls smooth muscle contraction is different:
Smooth muscle has thin filament regulation (troponin & actin), but ALSO has thick filament regulation:
- Rise in intracellular Ca2+
- Four calciums bind calmodulin
- Ca-calmodulin binds and activates MLCK
- MLCK phosphorylates myosin’s actin binding site on the light chain so it can interact with actin
Some smooth muscle organs have to perform tonic contraction, so they have to save their ATP. How do they do it?
Latched state: maintain contact between myosin and actin without ATP hydrolysis
During phasic vs tonic contraction, what’s the relationship between calcium and force?
Phasic contraction: force follows calcium conc (just like skeletal)
Tonic contraction: force increases with calcium, but doesn’t fall when calcium does; it’s maintained as long as Ca+ is above resting levels
How do you generate the latched state?
Myosin phosphatase dephosphorylates the myosin while its heads are still in contact with actin; possible in smooth muscle because binding is slower than it is in skeletal
To sustain force: at low [calcium], the # of actin-myosin crossbridges entering the latched state = # leaving the state
Myosin light chain phosphatase (MLCP) has what effect on smooth muscle?
Relax
Calcium sensitization
RhoA-activated ROK or PKC-potentiated CPI-17 inhibit MLCP
–> potentiates and prolongs the effect of IP3/Ca mediated muscle contraction
Vasopressin, endothelin, angiotensin, muscarinic agonists
activates the GPCRs that trigger calcium sensitization (block MLCP to sustain contraction)
In sekeltal muscle, calcium is released from
the SR and the SR only!
3 mechanisms to raise intracellular calcium conc in smooth muscle
- Release from plasma membrane
- Receptor-activated Ca+ channels (e.g. neurotransmitter)
- Potential dependent Ca+ channels
- Release from SR via GPCR pathway that induces PLC to metabolize PIP2 into DAG and IP3 –> IP3 binds/opens SR receptors
SR release of calcium in skeletal muscle is ___, but in smooth muscle it’s ___
mechanical
chemical
Different types of smooth muscle cells show different electrical activities that induce contraction
- AP: Rapid depolarization & repolarization
-
Pacemaker potential: Brief action potentials “riding” on a slow wave
- Depolarization by Na+ & Ca2+
- Repolarization by K+
-
Subthreshold potential change: No action potentials - resting membrane potential is sufficiently depolarized to activate a few voltage-dependent Ca+ channels -> constant influx of Ca maintains constant tone
- Slow changes in membrane potential induced by neurotransmitters and hormones
-
Pharmaco-cehmical: Certain agents can alter smooth muscle force without altering membrane potential
- Involves release Ca+ from SR via IP3