Smooth Muscle Flashcards

1
Q

Airway and blood vessel smooth muscle are examples of __ contractions.

Urinary bladder and intestinal smooth muscle are examples of __contractions.

A

Tonic contraction

Phasic contraction

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2
Q

Structural differences between smooth and skeletal muscle

A

Smooth muscle are single-nucleated and have a centrally placed nuceus.

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3
Q

How to skeletal muscles contract together​? How do smooth muscles do it?

A

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

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4
Q

While skeletal muscle is organized into striations aligned with the long axis of the cell, the contractile filaments of smooth muscle are arranged …

A

Diagnoally across the cell

Thinf ialments are connected to dense bodies (like the Z disc) which are linked by intermediate filaments

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5
Q

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:

A

Smooth muscle has thin filament regulation (troponin & actin), but ALSO has thick filament regulation:

  1. Rise in intracellular Ca2+
  2. Four calciums bind calmodulin
  3. Ca-calmodulin binds and activates MLCK
  4. MLCK phosphorylates myosin’s actin binding site on the light chain so it can interact with actin
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6
Q

Some smooth muscle organs have to perform tonic contraction, so they have to save their ATP. How do they do it?

A

Latched state: maintain contact between myosin and actin without ATP hydrolysis

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7
Q

During phasic vs tonic contraction, what’s the relationship between calcium and force?

A

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

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8
Q

How do you generate the latched state?

A

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

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9
Q

Myosin light chain phosphatase (MLCP) has what effect on smooth muscle?

A

Relax

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10
Q

Calcium sensitization

A

RhoA-activated ROK or PKC-potentiated CPI-17 inhibit MLCP

–> potentiates and prolongs the effect of IP3/Ca mediated muscle contraction

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11
Q

Vasopressin, endothelin, angiotensin, muscarinic agonists

A

activates the GPCRs that trigger calcium sensitization (block MLCP to sustain contraction)

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12
Q

In sekeltal muscle, calcium is released from

A

the SR and the SR only!

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13
Q

3 mechanisms to raise intracellular calcium conc in smooth muscle

A
  1. Release from plasma membrane
    1. Receptor-activated Ca+ channels (e.g. neurotransmitter)
    2. Potential dependent Ca+ channels
  2. Release from SR via GPCR pathway that induces PLC to metabolize PIP2 into DAG and IP3 –> IP3 binds/opens SR receptors
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14
Q

SR release of calcium in skeletal muscle is ___, but in smooth muscle it’s ___

A

mechanical

chemical

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15
Q

Different types of smooth muscle cells show different electrical activities that induce contraction

A
  1. AP: Rapid depolarization & repolarization
  2. Pacemaker potential: Brief action potentials “riding” on a slow wave
    1. Depolarization by Na+ & Ca2+
    2. Repolarization by K+
  3. 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
    1. Slow changes in membrane potential induced by neurotransmitters and hormones
  4. Pharmaco-cehmical: Certain agents can alter smooth muscle force without altering membrane potential
    1. Involves release Ca+ from SR via IP3
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16
Q

All hormones and signal molecules that induce muscle CONTRACTION are mediated by__

The ones that induces RELAXATION are done by __

A

contract: IP3
relax: cAMP

17
Q

Multiunit smooth muscle

A

Has few gap junctions

Each smooth muscle cell acts individually, with little-no connections between them; mostly innervated by autonomic nervous system

Ex) Ciliary muscle of the eye, iris, and piloerector muscles

18
Q

Single unit smooth muscle

A

Many gap junctions, so electrical signals are rapidly passed between cells.

Poorly innervated by the autonomic nervous system

Ex) GI taract, uterus, ureters, blood vessels

19
Q

Why does total stress continue to increase with length even when active stress is reduced?

A

Passive stress increases from elasticity of smooth muscle cells

20
Q

Increasing the level of myosin phosphorylation …

A

Increases the contraction velocity and max force

21
Q
A
22
Q

The decision of the skeletal muscle contraction is ultimately made by the ____. Whereas, smooth muscle..

A

For skeletal muscle, the motor neuron decides on contraction.

For smooth muscle, the muscle cell receives and integrates many signals that impact the degree of contraction - so the muscle cell makes the decision.

23
Q

The nervous innervation of __ muscle is much more diffuse.

A

smooth.

Smooth muscle, unlike skeletal muscle, can survive without nervous input.

24
Q
A