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Introduction The Muscular System
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Striated = striped. Skeletal muscle appears striped under a microscope
Muscle Tissue Elongated cells, specialized for contraction Three types of muscle tissue: Skeletal muscle – striated/voluntary Cardiac muscle – striated/involuntary Smooth muscle – not striated/involuntary Striated = striped. Skeletal muscle appears striped under a microscope
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Skeletal Muscle Functions
Produces movement of the skeleton Maintains posture and body position Supports soft tissues Guards entrances and exits Maintains body temperature by generating heat Skeletal muscles pull on tendons attached to bones and thereby result in movement. 2. Continuous muscle contractions maintain posture. Without this constant action, you could not sit upright without collapsing.
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Organization of Skeletal Muscle
Organ-level structure “Muscle” = many bundles of muscle fibers Muscle fiber = single muscle cell (elongated) Fascicle = bundle of fibers fiber fascicle muscle
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Organization of Skeletal Muscle
Organ-level structure Connective Tissue layers: Endomysium (around a fiber) Perimysium (around a fascicle) Epimysium (outer layer) Connective tissue layers converge to become the tendon
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Cellular Level Anatomy
Sarcolemma = muscle fiber membrane Sarcoplasm = cytoplasm of muscle cell Sarcoplasmic reticulum = stores calcium for contraction Transverse (T) tubules = network of narrow tubes that form passageways through a muscle fiber Each muscle fiber contains hundreds to thousands of myofibrils. Myofibrils are responsible for muscle contraction. Because they are attached to the sarcolemma at each end of the cell, their contraction shortens the entire cell. Scattered among the myofibrils are mitochondria and granules of glycogen, a source of glucose. The breakdown of glucose and the activity of the mitochondria provide the ATP needed to power muscluar contractions
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Organization of Skeletal Muscle
Myofibrils = cytoskeletal proteins; composed of myofilaments (actin and myosin) Alternating arrangement of myofilaments gives skeletal muscle a striated appearance Actin = thin filament = light band Myosin = thick filament = dark band
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Organization of Skeletal Muscle
Nuclei (many) sarcolemma mitochondria sarcoplasm Myofibril; myofilaments
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Organization of Skeletal Muscle
Hierarchy of organization: Muscle fascicle fiber myofibrils myofilaments (actin/myosin)
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The Sarcomere Functional unit of skeletal muscle
Each myfobril consists of ~10,000 sarcomeres arranged end to end Arrangement of actin and myosin within the sarcomere produce a striped appearance Each myofibril consists of 10,000 sarcomeres arranged end to end. The sarcomere is the smallest functional unit of the muscle fiber. Interactions between the thick and thin filaments of sarcomeres are responsible for muscle contraction.
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Sarcoplasmic reticulum
Sarcomere Structure Z line = marks the boundaries of each sarcomere M line = middle of the sarcomere Sarcomere Sarcoplasmic reticulum Z line Z line M line
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Sarcoplasmic reticulum
Sarcomere Structure A band = Myosin (thick filament; dark band) I band = Actin (thin filament; light band) Sarcomere Sarcoplasmic reticulum Myosin Actin Z line Z line Neither type of filament spans the entire length of an individual sarcomere. The thick filaments lie in the center of the sarcomere, thin filaments at either end of the sarcomere. Differences in densities between actin and myosin account for the banded appearance of the sarcomere. M line I band A band I band
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Sarcoplasmic reticulum
Sarcomere Structure Animation H zone = no overlap between thick and thin filaments Sarcomere Sarcoplasmic reticulum Myosin Actin Z line H zone Z line M line I band A band I band
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Label…A, I, M, Z, H animation
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Actin Most abundant protein on earth
Active site = location of interaction with myosin At rest, proteins (troponin and tropomyosin) block the active site on actin, preventing actin and myosin from interacting
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Myosin Motor protein
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Muscle at Rest Actin and myosin lie side-by side
Myosin heads are “primed” for contraction H zone and I band are at maximum width
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Changes to the sarcomere during contraction
I band gets smaller Z lines move closer together H zone decrease Width of A bands doesn’t change animation
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Sliding Filament Theory
Model of muscle contraction Thin filament “slides” past the thick filament Contraction = sarcomere shortening Involves 5 different molecules and calcium Myosin Actin Tropomyosin Troponin ATP myosin
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Role of Nervous System Brain/spinal cord sends an impulse to the muscle Impulse = electrical signal Neuromuscular junction = nerve + muscle fiber Acteylcholine = neurotransmitter, activates the muscle Impulse travels through T-tubules triggering release of calcium from the sarcoplasmic reticulum
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Muscle Contraction The brain or spinal cord sends an impulse to the muscle
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impulse travels through the plasma membrane (sarcolemma) and down T tubules surrounding the myofibrils
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4. As the impulse passes through the T tubules, it causes the sarcoplasmic reticulum to release calcium ions Calcium ions diffuse and reach the sarcomere
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The Ca2+ binds to troponin located on the actin filament, causing tropomoyosin to move and expose active sites for myosin
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Myosin head binds to actin and forms a crossbridge
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ADP and Pi are released from myosin, which causes the myosin to move
ADP and Pi are released from myosin, which causes the myosin to move. This is called the power stroke
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ATP binds to myosin causing it to release the actin and reverting ATP into ADP and Pi. Myosin is ready to form another crossbridge and the cycle of contraction will continue until the impulse stops
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Once the impulse stops, calcium is released from troponin causing tropomyosin to cover the active sire to prevent contraction. Ca is transported back into the SR and waits for another impulse Rellaxation
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Muscle Contraction Muscle at rest
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Muscle Contraction Calcium binds to troponin; tropomyosin shifts, exposing active sites on actin
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Muscle Contraction Myosin binds to actin (cross-bridge is formed); ADP released from myosin
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Muscle Contraction Myosin head pivots, pulling actin toward the center of the sarcomere; ADP + P released POWER STROKE
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Muscle Contraction ATP binds myosin; actin released; cross bridge is broken
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Muscle Contraction Myosin re-extends into “ready” position
ATP ADP + P As long as calcium is still around, another contraction cycle will occur
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Contraction animation
Muscle Contraction Contraction ends when Impulses stop Calcium ion concentration returns to normal Contraction animation
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Muscle Sketches Skeletal muscle (see page 113; compare with what you see on a microscope) Label nuclei, muscle fiber Actin filament (see page 198) Label actin, troponin, tropomyosin, active site Myosin filament (see page 198) Label head Sarcomere (at rest and during contraction) Label all parts (A, I, actin, myosin, H, M, Z)
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