Muscles and Muscle Tissue

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Muscles and Muscle Tissue
Advertisements

Chapter 9: Muscles and Muscle Tissue
Introduction to Muscle Anatomy
Chapter 6 The Muscular System
The Muscular System.
The Muscular System.
Lecture 9a Muscle structure.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Human Anatomy & Physiology SEVENTH EDITION Elaine N. Marieb Katja Hoehn PowerPoint.
The Muscular System. MUSCULAR SYSTEM Types of Muscle Tissue: Skeletal, Smooth, and Cardiac Skeletal, aka “striated” voluntary – attached to bones and.
Muscles and Muscle Tissue
OBJECTIVES At the end of this lecture the student should be able to: Define different types of muscles Enumerate cellular organization of human skeletal.
Muscles and Muscle Tissue Chapter 9. Overview of Muscle Tissue n There are three types of muscle tissue –Skeletal muscle –Cardiac muscle –Smooth muscle.
The Muscular System.
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Human Anatomy & Physiology, Sixth Edition Elaine N. Marieb PowerPoint ® Lecture.
Chapter 8-Muscular System. Case Study # 1 Signs and Symptoms: -Respiratory Acidosis -Accelerated oxygen consumption -Extreme heat production Case Study.
Muscle Tissue 11/14 Nearly half of body's mass Three types – Skeletal – Cardiac – Smooth Differ in structure, location, function and activation Muscle.
Muscle Structure and Function
Chap 9 Muscle Tissue Intro Learning Objectives: 1.Compare & contrast the basic types of muscle tissue. 2.Describe the characteristics of each muscle type.
Muscle & Muscle Tissue. Types of Muscle Tissue Skeletal Are striated Controlled voluntarily Tires easily.
Muscle Tissue: An Introduction. Muscles make up close to half of the body mass and are unique in transforming chemical energy (ATP) into mechanical energy.
Muscle Types pgs Microscopic Anatomy of Skeletal Muscle pgs *emphasis will be placed on skeletal muscle.
Essentials of Human Anatomy & Physiology Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slides 6.1 – 6.17 Seventh Edition Elaine.
Musculo-Skeletal Anatomy Making the body move!. Goals Important muscle groups to know Review muscle functions, types, and general anatomy In-depth look.
ELAINE N. MARIEB EIGHTH EDITION 6 Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide Presentation by.
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Human Anatomy & Physiology, Sixth Edition Elaine N. Marieb PowerPoint ® Lecture.
Chap 9 Muscle Tissue Intro, pgs Learning Objectives: 1.Compare & contrast the basic types of muscle tissue. 2.Describe the characteristics of.
PowerPoint ® Lecture Slides prepared by Leslie Hendon, University of Alabama, Birmingham HUMAN ANATOMY fifth edition MARIEB | MALLATT | WILHELM 10 Copyright.
Skeletal Muscle Physiology Lecture 1. Skeletal Muscle Characteristics and Functions Characteristics: Multinucleated (peripheral nuclei) Striated Voluntary.
Muscle Overview The three types of muscle tissue are skeletal, cardiac, and smooth The three types of muscle tissue are skeletal, cardiac, and smooth These.
Muscular System. Muscle Video Characteristics of Muscles Skeletal and smooth muscle cells are elongated (muscle cell = muscle fiber) Contraction of muscles.
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Human Anatomy & Physiology, Sixth Edition Elaine N. Marieb PowerPoint ® Lecture.
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Human Anatomy & Physiology, Sixth Edition Elaine N. Marieb PowerPoint ® Lecture.
Muscles and Muscle Tissue Converting ATP into mechanical energy….thereby capable of exerting force.
The Muscular System Slide 6.1 Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings  Muscles are responsible for all types of body.
Physiology, drugs and disease Muscle Structure and Function FdSc FISM Year 2 Janis Leach 15/01/10.
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Human Anatomy & Physiology, Sixth Edition Elaine N. Marieb PowerPoint ® Lecture.
Chapter 6 The Muscle Anatomy. The Muscular System Functions  Movement  Maintain posture  Stabilize joints  Generate heat Three basic muscle types.
Muscular Contraction.
Muscular System Physiology. 1. Skeletal muscle tissue:  Attached to bones and skin  Striated  Voluntary (i.e., conscious control)  Powerful  Primary.
Chapter 9 Muscles and Muscle Tissue Part A. 2 Muscle Overview The three types of muscle tissue are skeletal, cardiac, and smooth These types differ in.
Essentials of Human Anatomy & Physiology Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slides 6.1 – 6.17 Seventh Edition Elaine.
Muscles and Muscle Tissue P A R T A. Muscle Overview The three types of muscle tissue are skeletal, cardiac, and smooth These types differ in structure,
ELAINE N. MARIEB EIGHTH EDITION 6 Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide Presentation by.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Human Anatomy & Physiology SEVENTH EDITION Elaine N. Marieb Katja Hoehn PowerPoint.
Muscles and Muscle Tissue
Muscles and Muscle Tissue
Muscles and Muscle Tissue
Muscles & Muscle Tissue
The Muscular System.
Chapter 6 The Muscular System
Muscles and Muscle Tissue
Chapter 6 The Muscular System
Muscles and Muscle Tissue
Types of Muscle Tissues
Chapter 6 The Muscular System
Chapter 6 The Muscular System
Essentials of Anatomy and Physiology
The Muscular System.
Muscles and Muscle Tissue
The Muscular System.
Chapter 6 The Muscular System
Chapter 8: Muscular System
Muscular System.
Muscle Anatomy and Physiology
Muscles and Muscle Tissue
Chapter 9 Muscular System Part I.
Chapter 6 The Muscle Anatomy
chapter 9-1: muscular system intro
7 The Muscular System.
Muscles of the human body:
Presentation transcript:

Muscles and Muscle Tissue Chapter 9 Muscles and Muscle Tissue Part A

Muscle Overview The three types of muscle tissue are skeletal, cardiac, and smooth These types differ in structure, location, function, and means of activation

Muscle Similarities Skeletal and smooth muscle cells are elongated and are called muscle fibers Muscle contraction depends on two kinds of myofilaments – actin and myosin Muscle terminology is similar Sarcolemma – muscle plasma membrane Sarcoplasm – cytoplasm of a muscle cell Prefixes – myo, mys, and sarco all refer to muscle

Skeletal Muscle Tissues Packaged in skeletal muscles that attach to and cover the bony skeleton Has obvious stripes called striations Is controlled voluntarily (i.e., by conscious control) Contracts rapidly but tires easily Is responsible for overall body motility Is extremely adaptable and can exert forces over a range from a fraction of an ounce to over 70 pounds

Cardiac Muscle Tissue Occurs only in the heart Is striated like skeletal muscle but is not voluntary Contracts at a fairly steady rate set by the heart’s pacemaker Neural controls allow the heart to respond to changes in bodily needs

Smooth Muscle Tissue Found in the walls of hollow visceral organs, such as the stomach, urinary bladder, and respiratory passages Forces food and other substances through internal body channels It is not striated and is involuntary

Muscle Function Skeletal muscles are responsible for all locomotion Cardiac muscle is responsible for coursing the blood through the body Smooth muscle helps maintain blood pressure, and squeezes or propels substances (i.e., food, feces) through organs Muscles also maintain posture, stabilize joints, and generate heat

Functional Characteristics of Muscles Excitability, or irritability – the ability to receive and respond to stimuli Contractility – the ability to shorten forcibly Extensibility – the ability to be stretched or extended Elasticity – the ability to recoil and resume the original resting length

Skeletal Muscle Each muscle is a discrete organ composed of muscle tissue, blood vessels, nerve fibers, and connective tissue The three connective tissue wrappings are: Epimysium – an overcoat of dense regular CT that surrounds the entire muscle Perimysium – fibrous CT that surrounds groups of muscle fibers called fascicles Endomysium – fine sheath of CT composed of reticular fibers surrounding each muscle fiber

Skeletal Muscle Figure 9.1

Skeletal Muscle: Nerve and Blood Supply Each muscle is served by one nerve, an artery, and one or more veins Each skeletal muscle fiber is supplied with a nerve ending that controls contraction Contracting fibers require continuous delivery of oxygen and nutrients via arteries Wastes must be removed via veins

Skeletal Muscle: Attachments Muscles span joints and are attached to bone in at least two places When muscles contract the movable bone, the muscle’s insertion moves toward the immovable bone – the muscle’s origin Muscles attach: Directly – epimysium of the muscle is fused to the periosteum of a bone Indirectly – CT wrappings extend beyond the muscle as a tendon or aponeurosis

Microscopic Anatomy of a Skeletal Muscle Fiber Each fiber is a long, cylindrical cell with multiple nuclei just beneath the sarcolemma Fibers are 10 to 100 m in diameter, and up to hundreds of centimeters long Each cell is a syncytium produced by fusion of embryonic cells Sarcoplasm has numerous glycosomes and a unique oxygen-binding protein called myoglobin Fibers contain the usual organelles, myofibrils, sarcoplasmic reticulum, and T tubules

Myofibrils Myofibrils are densely packed, rodlike contractile elements They make up most of the muscle volume The arrangement of myofibrils within a fiber is such that a perfectly aligned repeating series of dark A bands and light I bands is evident Figure 9.2b

Sarcomeres The smallest contractile unit of a muscle The region of a myofibril between two successive Z discs Composed of myofilaments made up of contractile proteins Myofilaments are of two types – thick and thin Figure 9.2c

Myofilaments: Banding Pattern Thick filaments – extend the entire length of an A band Thin filaments – extend across the I band and partway into the A band Z-disc – coin-shaped sheet of proteins (connectins) that anchors the thin filaments and connects myofibrils to one another

Myofilaments: Banding Pattern Thin filaments do not overlap thick filaments in the lighter H zone M lines appear darker due to the presence of the protein desmin Figure 9.2d

Ultrastructure of Myofilaments: Thick Filaments Thick filaments are composed of the protein myosin Figure 9.3a, b

Ultrastructure of Myofilaments: Thick Filaments Each myosin molecule has a rodlike tail and two globular heads Tails – two interwoven, heavy polypeptide chains Heads – two smaller, light polypeptide chains called cross bridges Figure 9.3a, b

Ultrastructure of Myofilaments: Thin Filaments Thin filaments are chiefly composed of the protein actin Each actin molecule is a helical polymer of globular subunits called G actin The subunits contain the active sites to which myosin heads attach during contraction Tropomyosin and troponin are regulatory subunits bound to actin Figure 9.3c

Arrangement of the Filaments in a Sarcomere Longitudinal section within one sarcomere Figure 9.3d