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Chapter 38, (page 734 - ) Locomotion Skeleton + Muscles Csaba Bödör, bodor@korb1.sote.hu
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Skeletal system Internal skeleton that can grow Bones and cartilage, (Ca impregnated)
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Cartilage and Bones Main components of the skeletal system Cartilage in humans: external ear, tip of the nose, etc. Cells of cartilage: chondrocytes They secrete: matrix and collagen fibers > cartilage Lacuna: small cavity within the matrix Cartilage lacks nerves and blood vessels Bone cells: osteocytes: secrete and maintain the matrix Bone is a highly vascular tissue (rich is blood vessels) Typical bone: outer layer- compact bone, inner layer- spongy bone Compact bone: units called osteons Osteons: osteocytes are arranged (lamella) Central microscopic canal: Haversian canal
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Structure of a typical bone Typical long bone (example: radius) periosteum: outer connective tissue membrane (+ layers > diameter) endosteum: inner lining outer compact bone,> yellow marrow inner spongy bone > red marrow diaphysis and 2 epiphyses metaphysis (between d and e) disk of cartilage: growth center (length) they disappear at maturity and become epiphyseal lines
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Process of bone formation Enchondral bone development (ossification) bone is formed from a cartilage template primary ossification in diaphysis secondary in epiphyses
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Process of bone formation Intramembraneous bone development (ossification) bone is formed from other connective tissue (mesenchyme) typical for flat bones
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Process of bone formation Continuous formation and resorbtion (destruction) Osteoblasts: bone-building cells: matrix, collagen fibers They differentiate (mature) into osteocytes Osteoblasts are rich in RER, Golgi The inorganic part of bones is hydroxyapatite (mainly calcium phosphate)
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Process of bone formation Continuous formation and resorbtion (destruction) Osteoclasts: break down bone (resorb) large multinucleated cells (sometimes 50 nuclei) release H + to dissolve crystals and enzymes to digest collagen dynamic process, the whole skeleton is completely replaced every 10 years osteoporosis: disease with increased bone resorbtion bones become too fragile
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Muscle tissue Is specialized to contract Long cells > muscle fibers, in muscle fibers: longitudinal, contractile units: Myofibrils (myosin + actin, …)
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Muscle tissue Types
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SKELETAL MUSCLE SMOOTH MUSCLE CARDIAC MUSCLE
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Muscle structure Elongated cells: muscle fibers, wrapped by connective tissue Plasma membrane: sarcolemma Sarcolemma inward extensions: T tubules Cytoplasm of a muscle fiber: sarcoplasm Endoplasmic reticulum: sarcoplasmic reticulum Longitudinal units : myofibrils In myofibrils smaller structures: myofilaments Myofilaments: myosin and actin filaments Myosin filaments: thick, mainly protein myosin Actin filaments: thin, protein actin, tropomyosin, troponin
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Muscle structure
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Muscle structure - sarcomere Sarcomere : basic unit of muscle contraction M line I band A band H zone Sarcomere
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Muscle contraction Contraction: sarcomeres shorten Theory: sliding filament model
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Muscle contraction Theory: sliding filament model
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Muscle contraction MOTOR neuron Neuromuscular junction
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Muscle contraction MOTOR unit Motor neuron + ~150 muscle fibers
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Muscle contraction
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Ca channels in SR open > Ca released into the sarcoplasm a.p. travels along the sarcolemma into the T tubules Depolarization, action potential Acetylcholine + receptors Acetylcholine: released into synaptic cleft Ca binds to troponin Muscle contraction (sarcomeres shorten)
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Muscle contraction Ca binds to troponin Change of the shape of the troponin Troponin pushes the tropomyosin away from active sites on actin filaments Myosin binding sites are exposed
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Muscle contraction ATP + MYOSIN at rest ATP is split : chemical e. > mechanical e Myosin + ADP+P: energized state „cocked” state Energized myosin binds to actin (cross bridge)
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Muscle contraction P is released > conf. change in myosin head Power stroke: actin is pulled closer to the center of the sarcomere (ADP is released) Myosin is detached after binding of a new ATP If sufficient Ca present > new cycle with new active sites > shortening cont.
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Acetylcholin-esterase Ca back to SR Muscles in partially contracted state Muscle tone:
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Muscle contraction, energy ATP is the immediate energy source, ATP hydrolysis provides the energy to “cock” the myosin Creatine phosphate: used for intermediate energy storage Glycogen: energy is stored in form of glucose
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Muscle action Agonist muscle contracts Antagonist muscle relaxes
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Specialized muscle fibers Types of myosin: Type I., IIa, IIx Slow (red fibers): mainly type I. rich in mitochondria and myoglobin Endurance activities (swimming, long distance running, etc.) White (fast fibers): type IIa., IIx few mitochondria Rapid response (sprinting, lift weight) They can sustain activity for only a short time Single stimulus: single quick contraction called simple twitch Series of stimuli close together: single sustained contraction: tetanus Contraction of smooth muscles tends to be sustained !! No sustained contraction in cardiac muscle !!
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