Structure and contraction of skeletal muscles Flashcards

1
Q

How do muscles work in an antagonistic pairs.

A

-Work in antagonistic pairs
-one muscle contracts (pull on bone) while other one relaxes
-Attached to bone by tendons
-Ligaments attached from one bone to other
-Skeletal muscle is incompressible so muscles can transmit force to bone

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2
Q

Advantages of skeletal muscles being arranged in antagonistic pairs

A

Muscles can contract
2nd muscle required to reverse the movement caused by 1st
Helps maintain posture——>contraction of both muscles

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3
Q

gross structure of skeletal muscle

A

-Muscle made of bundle of muscle fibres packaged together. (muscle–>muscle fibre—> myofibril)

Muscle cell contains
Cell membrane= Sarcolemma
Cytoplasm= sarcoplasm
Myofibrils made up of two proteins, actin and myosin
-shared nuclei
-Lots of endoplasmic reticulum

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4
Q

Ultrastructure of a myofibril

A

made up of many sarcomeres which are made up of partly overlapping myosin and actin filaments.

Sarcomere consists of:
Z-line- End
M-line=Middle
H zone= around M line which only contains myosin

Myosin filaments=thick
Actin filaments= Thin
This causes a banding pattern to be seen:
I band= light bands containing only thick actin filaments
A bands= dark bands containing thick myosin filaments and some overlapping actin

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5
Q

What happens during Muscle contraction to sarcomere

A

Myosin head slide actin past myosin causing the sarcomere to contract. Simultaneously contraction of lots of sarcomeres causes myofibrils and muscle fibres to contract.
When the sarcomere contracts:
-H zones shorter
- I band shorter
-A band same
-Z lines closer

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6
Q

Sliding filament theory

A

-Action potential spreads down T-tubules causing the release of Ca+ ions from sarcoplasmic reticulum which diffuse through the sarcoplasm to the myofibril.
-Ca2+ binds to tropomyosin causing it to move as it changes shape, exposing the myosin binding site on actin.
-So myosin heads (with ADP attached) attach to binding site forming an actinomyosin crossbridge (requires ATP)
-Myosin head bends and this slides actin along myosin (performs a power stroke - needs ATP)
-ATP binds to myosin head causing it to detach from the actin binding site. Breaks the crossbridge.
-The hydrolysis of ATP by ATPase (which is activated by ca2+ release energy for myosin heads to move back to original position
-Myosin reattaches to a different binding site further along actin filament( only repeated as long as Ca2+ present.)

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7
Q

Slow twitch muscles

A

-Specialised for slow, sustained contractions e.g. endurance activities (maintaining posture)
-Located in muscles that give posture and in leg muscles of long distance runners.
-aerobic respiration produces ATP (oxidative phosphorylation) in muscles for aerobic respiration.
-High levels of myoglobin makes them appear red—-> store large amounts of oxygen in muscle for aerobic respiration.
-Many mitochondria—–> high rate of aerobic respiration
-Many capillaries—> large SA—–> supply high conc. of oxygen/glucose for aerobic respiration and to prevent build up of lactic acid causing muscle fatigue.

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8
Q

Fast twitch

A

-Specialised for producing rapid, intense contractions of short duration.
-Used for short bursts of speed and power e.g. sprinting
-Located in the legs of sprinters for example
-Anaerobic respiration produces ATP to release energy quickly.
-Low levels of myoglobin makes them a whitish colour—> anaerobic respiration doesn’t need oxygen.
-lots of glycogen—-> hydrolysed to lots of glucose—>used during glycolysis (anaerobic respiration) only yielding 2 ATP per glucose molecules.
-higher conc. of enzymes involved in anaerobic respiration—->higher rate of anaerobic respiration
-Store phosphocreatine which rapidly generates ATP from ADP by providing phosphate
-Muscles can get fatigued quickly because of high amounts of lactate

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9
Q

ROle of phosphocreatine in muscle contraction

A

-Phosphocreatine stored inside cells
-rapidly makes ATP by phosphorylating ADP by adding phosphate group from PCr.
-PCr runs out after a few seconds so it’s used in short burst of vigorous exercise

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