Structure and Function of muscle Flashcards

1
Q

Three types of Muscle tissue

A
  1. Skeletal
  2. Smooth
  3. Cardiac
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2
Q

Skeletal muscle comp.

A

75% water
20% protein
5% salt and other substance

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3
Q

Layers of CT

A
  • epimysium (upon)
  • perimysium (around)
  • endomysium (within)
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4
Q

Layers of Muscle Tissue

A
  • Muscle belly (bundle of fasciculia)
  • Fasciculus – Group of muscle fibers
  • Muscle Fibers/Muscle Cells/Myofibers
    • Myofibrils
      • Sarcomeres – Basic functional unit of muscle
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5
Q

Plasmalemma/Sarcolemma (cell membrane)

A

Fuses with tendon
Conducts action potential (electrical signal for muscle contraction)
Maintains pH
Transports nutrients; capillary interaction

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6
Q

Satellite Cells

A

Involved in muscle growth and development

Aids responses to injury and training

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7
Q

Nucleus

A

DNA storage

Unlike other cells, muscle fibers have multiple nuclei

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8
Q

Sarcoplasm

A

Fluid portion of cell
Called cytoplasm in other cells; organelles, proteins, minerals, fats
Unlike other cells, contains large amounts of Glycogen and Myoglobin (similar to Hemoglobin)

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9
Q

Transverse Tubules/T-Tubules

A

Carry action potential deeper into muscle fiber

Pathway for substances to enter and exit the cell

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10
Q

Sarcoplasmic Reticulum

A

Storage site of Calcium (Ca2+)

Calcium is essential for muscle contraction

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11
Q

Thick Protein Filaments

A
shows up darker under microscope
myosin
-2/3 of muscle protein
-anchored to m-line
-two protein strands twisted together 
-end folds into globular heads (myosin heads)
titin
-stabilize the myosin filaments
-Ca binds to it increasing force when stretched 
-prevents overstretching 
-extends from Z to M-line
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12
Q

Thin Protein Filaments

A
lighter under microscope 
inserts into Z-line
Actin
-contains myosin-binding sites
Tropomyosin
-Covers binding site at rest
Troponin
-Moves Tropomyosin away from binding site
Nebulin
-Anchoring protein for Actin
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13
Q

Motor unit

A

starts in the motor cortex
α-motor neuron and all the muscle fibers it innervates
more activated motor units=greater force

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14
Q

Neuromuscular Junction

A

Synapse between α-motor neuron and muscle fiber

Communication between neuron and muscle

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15
Q

Excitation-Contraction Coupling

A
  1. The action potential arrives at the axon terminal, releasing acetylcholine (ACh)
  2. ACh crosses the synaptic cleft and binds to ACh receptors on plasmalemma
  3. The action potential travels down the T-tubules
  4. The action potential triggers Calcium release from the Sarcoplasmic Reticulum
  5. Calcium binds to Troponin and enables Actin-Myosin contraction
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16
Q

Sliding Filament Theory

A

after power stroke

  • The Myosin Head detaches from Actin
  • The Myosin Head rotates back to its original position
  • The Myosin Head attaches to a new site further down on Actin
17
Q

Energy for Muscle Contraction

A

ATP
ATP breaks down into ADP releasing the stored energy
Located on the Myosin head
Required to detach the myosin head from actin
ATP is needed to pump Ca back into the Sarcoplasmic Reticulum