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Published byDoreen Henry Modified over 9 years ago
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Smooth Muscle Spindle-shaped cells 2-10 m across & ~100 m long Have a thin endomysium Organized into longitudinal and circular layers Found in walls of contractile organs (except the heart)
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Innervation of Smooth Muscle Lacks neuromuscular junctions Innervating nerves form varicosities Varicosities release neurotransmitters into synaptic clefts called diffuse junctions
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Microscopic Anatomy of Smooth Muscle SR less developed than in sk mus & lacks specific pattern No T tubules Plasma membranes have caveoli Ca 2+ sequestered in extracellular space near caveoli Thin and thick filaments present, but no visible striations
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Intermediate filaments attached at “dense bodies” More thick filaments per thin filament Thick filaments have heads along their entire length No troponin complex Myofilaments arranged diagonally Organization of Myofilaments in Smooth Muscle
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Contraction of Smooth Muscle Synchronized contraction sheets of smooth muscle Gap junctions electrically couple cells action potentials transmitted cell to cell Some smooth muscle cells: Act as pacemakers and set the contractile pace for whole sheets of muscle Are self-excitatory and depolarize without external stimuli
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Contraction Mechanism Actin and myosin interact via to the sliding filament mechanism Resting State Actin bound by caldesmon Myosin light chain (MLC) dephosphorylated Intracellular [Ca 2+ ] low Rise in intracellular Ca 2+ triggers contraction Ca 2+ enters from the extracellular space (some from SR) Increase in [Ca 2+ ] caused by: Excitation by neurotransmitters (extracellular Ca) Hormonal signaling via receptors & 2 nd messengers (SR Ca) Ca flux can be inhibited by various inhibitory stimuli – hormonal & neuronal
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Regulation of SM Contraction Actin
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Role of Ca 2+ for Contraction Ca 2+ binds to calmodulin (Cam) Ca-Cam binds to & activates myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) CaCam binds to & inactivates caldesmon Active caldesmon binds actin CaCam-inactivated caldesmon can’t bind actin The free actin is available for myosin to bind Activated MLCK phosphorylates myosin head region allowing cross bridges with actin to form
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Special Features of Smooth Muscle Contraction Unique characteristics of smooth muscle include: Smooth muscle tone Slow, prolonged contractile activity Low energy requirements Response to stretch
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Response to Stretch Smooth muscle exhibits a phenomenon called stress-relaxation response in which: Smooth muscle responds to stretch only briefly, and then adapts to its new length The new length, however, retains its ability to contract This enables organs such as the stomach and bladder to temporarily store contents
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Hyperplasia Certain smooth muscles can divide and increase their numbers by undergoing hyperplasia estrogen’s effect on the uterus During pregnancy, estrogen stimulates uterine growth to accommodate growing fetus
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Types of Smooth Muscle: Single Unit The cells of single-unit smooth muscle, commonly called visceral muscle: Contract rhythmically as a unit electrically coupled via gap junctions exhibit spontaneous action potentials arranged in opposing sheets exhibit stress-relaxation response
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Types of Smooth Muscle: Multiunit Multiunit smooth muscles are found: airways of lungs arteries arrector pili muscles internal eye muscles characteristics include: Rare gap junctions Infrequent spontaneous depolarizations Structurally independent muscle fibers rich nerve supply, 1/motor units Graded contractions in response to neural stimuli
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Muscular Dystrophies Group of inherited muscle degeneration diseases Muscle fibers atrophy Muscle tissue replaced by connective tissues (scar tissue) Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) sex-linked recessive inheritance (gene on X chromosome) 1/3500 live male births caused by a defect in the gene encoding the protein dystrophin dystrophin helps maintain muscle cell integrity during use
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