Smooth muscle contraction Flashcards
What does smooth muscle look like under a microscope?
Sheet like layers
No striations
Single nuclei
Spindle shaped cells
What differs the arrangement of Smooth muscle to Skeletal muscle?
Smooth muscle’s thick and thin filaments are NOT organised in myofibrils and sarcomeres like Skeletal muscle has - hence no banding pattern
How does contractions of Skeletal muscle occur?
By the sliding-filament mechanism and cross bridge mechanism
Where are smooth muscles found?
Surrounding. hollow structures and organs that. undergo large changes in the lengths of the smooth muscle fibres in their walls
What does the absence of cross striations indicate about Smooth muscle?
That Smooth muscle lack myofibrillar structure
What percentage of Actin and Myosin is in Smooth muscles compared to striated muscles?
10% of their Myosin and Actin
What is Smooth muscles Actin : Myosin ratio?
Actin : Myosin
15:1
How is Actin and Myosin held within Smooth muscle?
Actin filaments - attached to dense bodies and radiate out from them, functioning in the same way as the Z-lines do
Myosin filaments - sit in between Actin
How does Smooth muscle change from relaxed too contracted?
Pulls thick filaments and cell becomes shorter and wider
What 2 other things give structure to Smooth muscle cells?
intermediate filaments and membrane dense area (attachment plaques)
What is the Sarcoplasmic reticulum like in Smooth muscle cells?
Under-developed Sarcoplasmic reticulum
Caveoli acts like T-tubules and since it has no T-tubules its sat at the plasma membrane
Where is Calcium stored in the Smooth muscle?
Extracellular space near Caveoli
What is cross-bridge cycling in Smooth muscle controlled by and what does this do?
Calcium regulated enzyme - MLCK (Myosin light chain kinase) phosphorylates Myosin, and only the phosphorylated version can bind to Actin and undergo cross-bridge cycling
What must happen to relax a contracted smooth muscle?
Myosin must be dephosphorylated by the enzyme MLCP (Myosin light chain phosphatase) because dephosphorylated Myosin is unable to bind to Actin
What are the 6 steps involved in contracting a Smooth muscle?
- Initiated by calcium from Extracellular fluid or Sarcoplasmic reticulum
- Calcium binds to
calmodulin (instead of troponin as in skeletal muscle) - Ca-caImoduIin-MLCK
complex leads to phosphorylation of MLC (requires 1 ATP) - MLC is part of myosin head
- Phosphorylated myosin head binds to actin and power stroke occurs automatically
- A second ATP is required to release
myosin head from actin
MLC = Myosin light chain MLCK = Myosin light chain kinase