Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byPhilomena Reeves Modified over 9 years ago
1
Muscle Skeletal muscle – Unit Cell Structure – Architecture Series/parallel Force/velocity – Stimulation Summation/tetanus/rate-coding – Muscle mechanics Force-length relation Force velocity relation – Pre-stretch
2
Skeletal Muscle Striated and voluntary – Cardiac muscle is striated – Smooth muscle is unstriated and involuntary Attaches to skeleton via tendons Most abundant tissue in the body – 45-75% of body weight
3
Structure of a muscle cell A. Fascicles – fiber bundles B. Fibers – muscle cell – bundles of myofibrils C. Myofibrils D. Sarcomeres (series) E. Actin & Myosin Filaments
4
Fascicles A muscle is composed of multiple fascicles in parallel – A sheath of connective tissue surrounds the muscle (epimysium) – Each fascicle is surrounded by connective tissue (perimysium) – Fascicles composed of bundles of muscle fibers
5
Muscle Fiber Long, cylindrical, multinucleated cells Between fibers are blood vessels Surrounded by endomysium Composed of myofibrils
6
Myofibrils Literally (muscle thread) Contractile element of muscle Made up of filaments Aligned in parallel filaments make striations – Banding pattern One repeating unit is called a sarcomere string of sarcomeres in series
7
Sarcomeres Functional unit of muscle contraction Literally ‘muscle segment’ Number of sarcomeres in a fiber is very important to muscle function When each sarcomere shortens the same amount, the fiber with more sarcomeres will shorten more. Made up of myofilaments – Thick and thin filaments
8
Myofilaments – Myosin(thick) – In central region – Dark bands – Globular heads – Arranged in both directions – Actin(thin)
9
Banding Pattern
10
Based on myofilaments : – Z-Disc – I-Band – A-Band – H-zone – M-line
11
Z-Disc M-line Sarcomere:
12
Muscle contraction Sliding filament theory – AF Huxley and HE Huxley – Light and Electron microscopy – Both published results same time in Nature – Does not explain lengthening contractions
13
Sliding Filament Theory The exertion of force by muscle is accompanied by the sliding of thick and thin filaments past one another Commonly explained by cross-bridges
14
cross-bridge theory: muscle force is proportional to the number of cross bridges attached
15
Sliding filament theory A band stay the same I band shorten
16
A single functional unit in a muscle contraction is a A)fascicle B)fiber C)myofibril D)sarcomere
17
According to sliding filament theory, during a contraction the distance between the M and Z lines A)increases B)decreases C)stays the same D)need more information
18
Muscle Skeletal muscle – Unit Cell Structure – Architecture Series/parallel Force/velocity – Stimulation Summation/tetanus/rate-coding – Muscle mechanics Force-length relation Force velocity relation – Pre-stretch
19
Muscle architecture Organization of muscle fibers – Muscle also organized at macro level – Architecture is the arrangement of muscle fibers relative to the axis of force generation Muscle fibers have fairly consistent diameters among muscle of different size, but arrangement can be very different So cannot tell force capacity of a muscle from a biopsy – Need number of fibers and how arranged
20
3 types of arrangements Longitudinal (parallel) – Fibers run parallel to force generating axis Pennate – Fibers at a single angle – shallow Multipennate – several angles
21
What are advantages/disadvantages of a)longitudinal arrangement? b)pennate arrangement?
22
Muscle architecture Determines – Max muscle force Fibers in parallel Pennation angle – Max muscle shortening velocity no of sarcomeres in series
23
Hill Muscle Model CE: Contractile Element (active force generation) SE: Series Elastic Element represents elasticity in: cross-bridges and myofilaments tendon and aponeuroses PE: Parallel Elastic Element connective tissue surrounding muscle fibers
24
Can use Hill muscle model to illustrate effects of muscle length and width on muscle’s – maximum force – maximum shortening velocity
25
f, l Series Parallel
26
f, l Series F=? L=? A)F = f ; L = l B)F = 3f ; L = 3 l C)F = 3f ; L = l D)F = f ; L = 3 l E)don’t understand
27
f, l f, L L=n l F, l F=nf f, l Series Parallel A)F = f ; L = l B)F = 3f ; L = 3 l C)F = 3f ; L = l D)F = f ; L = 3 l E)don’t understand
28
Pennation Angle
30
Pennation angle is a space saving strategy Allows you to pack more fibers into a smaller space Doesn’t hurt b/c cos0=1, cos 30=0.87 (13% force loss)
31
Muscle architecture Determines – Max muscle force Fibers in parallel Pennation angle – Max muscle shortening velocity no of sarcomeres in series
32
Physiological Cross-Sectional Area PCSA ~ max muscle force M=muscle mass (g) =muscle density (g/cm 3 ) = 1.056 g/cm 3 l=fiber length (cm) V= Muscle volume = M/
33
How do we measure PCSA?
35
More on PCSA Not proportional to muscle mass Not proportional to anatomical cross-sectional area
36
Muscle architecture Determines – Max muscle force (~PCSA) Fibers in parallel Pennation angle – Max muscle shortening velocity no of sarcomeres in series
37
Muscle fiber length Assumed that fiber length ~fiber velocity Fiber length ~ no. of sarcomeres in series
38
Muscle architecture Determines – Max muscle force (~PCSA) Fibers in parallel Pennation angle – Max muscle shortening velocity (~Fiber length) no of sarcomeres in series
39
What are advantages/disadvantages of a)longitudinal arrangement? b)pennate arrangement?
40
Significance of Architecture Clever design – Same functional component can yield so many different motors Muscles designed for a purpose – Perhaps this simplifies the control
41
Problem Imagine you have 10 sarcomeres; each generates a maximum of 1 unit of force, and shortens with a maximum velocity of 1 unit/s. Diagram an arrangement of sarcomeres that will create a muscle fiber with the following force and velocity characteristics. Use I to represent individual sarcomeres, and draw ellipses around sarcomeres to specify fibers. i) F max = 5 units; V max = 2 units/s ii) F max = 2 units; V max =5 units/s iii) F max =5cos10 o units; V max =2cos10 o units/s
42
Net muscle force Enoka Fig 1.6 Vector math can illustrate the effect of coactivating different parts of the pectoralis major muscle. Suppose clavicular component exerted a force of 224N at 0.55 rad above horizontal, and the sternal portions has a magnitude of 251N at 0.35 rad below horizontal. What is the resultant force? A)F = 472 N, angle = 64.5 deg B)F = 472 N, angle = 25.4 deg C)F = 428 N, angle = 4.17 deg D)F = 428 N, angle = 85.82 E)I don’t understand
43
Enoka Fig 1.6
44
Muscle Skeletal muscle – Unit Cell Structure – Architecture Series/parallel Force/velocity – Stimulation Summation/tetanus/rate-coding – Muscle mechanics Force-length relation Force velocity relation – Pre-stretch
45
Temporal Summation Excitation fast (~1-2ms) Contraction/relaxation slow (100ms) – Muscle twitch lags because slack in the elastic components must be taken up. – Contraction time: – Relaxation time: Summation – If second impulse comes along before the first one has relaxed, they sum – Get more force with multiple impulses then alone Tetanic Summation – maximum tension is sustained because rapidity of stimulation outstrips the contraction-relaxation time of the muscle
46
Time Stimulation (Action potentials) SingleLow frequencyHigh frequency Twitch Fused Tetanus Unfused Tetanus Force Neural Stimulation
47
If the contraction-relaxation time for a muscle twitch is 100 ms, at what stimulation frequency will we begin to see summation? NB: 1 Hz corresponds to 1 stimulus/second A)100 Hz and greater B)5 Hz and greater C)10 Hz and greater D)I don’t understand
49
Max Force PCSA – No. sarcomeres in parallel – Pennation angle Stimulation Max Shortening Velocity No. of sarcomeres in series – Muscle fiber length
50
Muscle Skeletal muscle – Unit Cell Structure – Architecture Series/parallel Force/velocity – Stimulation Summation/tetanus/rate-coding – Muscle mechanics Force-length relation Force velocity relation – Pre-stretch – WorkLoops
51
Muscle Mechanics Force-length Force-velocity
52
Force-Length Isometric force varies with muscle length – Forces generation in muscle is a direct function of the amount of overlap between actin and myosin filaments – P o is maximum tetanic force – Length of muscle at Po is muscle’s optimal length
55
0 1.0 0.6 0.8 0.4 0.2 1001201401608060 Rest length (%) Relative force Force-Length Relationship
56
0 1.0 0.6 0.8 0.4 0.2 1001201401608060 Rest length (%) Relative force Force-Length Relationship
57
0 1.0 0.6 0.8 0.4 0.2 1001201401608060 Rest length (%) Relative force Force-Length Relationship
58
0 1.0 0.6 0.8 0.4 0.2 1001201401608060 Rest length (%) Relative force Force-Length Relationship
59
0 1.0 0.6 0.8 0.4 0.2 1001201401608060 Rest length (%) Relative force Force-Length Relationship
60
Passive force production
61
Titin Cross-bridge not responsible, so what it? Origin of passive muscle tension within myofibrils – Researchers compared whole muscle, single fibers, and single fibers w/membranes removed (1986) – Huge protein responsible - titin
63
Force-Velocity
64
Muscle Actions 1. Shortening 2. Isometric 3. Lengthening
65
Force-Velocity Relative ForceVelocity 100% P o 0% V max 95% P o 1% V max 90% P2.2% V max 75% P o 6.3% V max 50% P o 16.6% V max 25% P o 37.5% V max 10% P o 64.3% V max 5% P o 79.1% V max 0% P o 100% V max
66
Shortening Contractions Force decreases with velocity
67
Knee Shank Thigh Knee extensor muscles in shortening contraction during knee extension
68
Knee Shank Thigh Isometric Contractions
69
Isometric
70
Knee Shank Thigh Active and Lengthening)
71
Lengthening Contractions Higher force (160%!) Velocity-independent Don’t know why Important – Common – Selective for soreness and injury – Muscle strengthening greatest
72
How will the force-angle curves change for different muscle actions? Force Isometric Knee Angle
73
Force PCSA – No. sarcomeres in parallel – Pennation angle Stimulation Sarcomere Length – Filament overlap Velocity Shortening Velocity No. of sarcomeres in series – Muscle fiber length Force
74
Summary Force and velocity – Structure of the unit cell – Sliding Filament Theory – Architecture – Stimulation – F-L – F-V
75
Put it all together Compare muscles w/two different pcsas – Draw F-L – Draw F-V for same fiber length Compare muscle w/different fiber lengths – Draw F-L, for same pcsa – Draw F-V
76
Muscle Skeletal muscle – Unit Cell Structure – Architecture Series/parallel Force/velocity – Stimulation Summation/tetanus/rate-coding – Muscle mechanics Force-length relation Force velocity relation – Pre-stretch
77
Prestretch: muscle is active and stretched before beginning to shorten Active lengthening (prestretch) Active shortening
78
Force P0P0 Shortening Velocity 0 0 Prestretch No prestretch Frog knee flexor (semitendinosis) From Cavagna & Citterio, 1974. Prestretch effect lasts for a limited time
79
Data from Gregor et al. 1988., (fig. 6.36 Enoka) Velocity (mm/s)
80
SSC Muscle can produce more power if actively stretched before it is allowed to shorten Can also lower metabolic cost
81
Immediately after being stretched Resting length Crossbridges (and/or titin?) act like springs: after being stretched, higher F per xbridge
82
PrestretchShorten Extensor stretch-shorten cycle in countermovement jump
83
Prestretch occurs in a variety of activities Jumping with countermovement Running Other examples?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.