Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAdam Barber Modified over 9 years ago
1
BGYB30 Midterm 2004 Total number of Marks available= 56 I will record all of the grades out of 54 total marks. Small adjustment of +0.5 for different markers Average mark = 36.4 Class average after adjustments = 36.4 / 54 = 67.4%
2
BGYB30 Midterm 2004 Short Answers Available for pickup next week during TA office hours (Mon 10-12, Wed 12-1) If you want your test remarked –Compare your grade to posted marking scheme –Tests will be entirely remarked /56 –Your test must NOT leave the office –All requests submitted by 1pm Nov 18
4
??
5
Taste Smell
6
Long distance Many receptors –1000s mouse –100-200 human All receptors are G-protein coupled receptors Depolarize olfactory cells, leading to APs Each receptor cell has only one or two types of receptor molecules Contact 4 basic tastes –Salt, bitter, sweet, sour –Complex mixing for taste perception All modify synaptic transmission between taste receptor and a sensory neuron Individual receptor cells respond best to one type of taste and less well to others
7
Sensory neuron depolarization Ca ++ Na + Complex stimuli Sugars Bitter Ionic stimuli Salt (Na+) Sour (H+) Second messenger Intracellular Ca ++ Taste Receptor
8
Olfaction Press Release: The 2004 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 4 October 2004 The Nobel Assembly at Karolinska InstitutetThe Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institutet has today decided to award The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for 2004 jointly to Richard Axel and Linda B. Buck for their discoveries of "odorant receptors and the organization of the olfactory system"
10
ATP cAMP Odourant molecule G-protein receptor Na+
11
glomerulus Olfactory receptor cells with different receptor molecules
12
Taste & Smell Summary –Both are receive and process external chemical stimuli –Taste receptors modify synaptic transmission –Olfactory receptors generate APs –Many types of olfactory receptors, only a few types of taste receptors
13
Muscle Next Class: BGYB30 Pose-Off Winner 2002 Winner 2003
14
Muscle Striated Smooth Skeletal movement Cardiac heart Blood vessels lungs intestine Mechanisms of muscle contraction essentially the same Differences in how muscle cells are organized and how contractions initiated
15
Muscle Tendon Bone Muscle Fibers nucleus Myofibril Skeletal muscle
16
Z ZZ M Sarcomere (2-3 m) A band I H Myofibril band zone
17
Banding patterns due to overlapping protein filaments H A I Z disk Actin filament Myosin filament Actin filament ‘cross bridges’
18
When muscle contracts the sarcomere length is reduced
19
REST CONTRACTION STRETCH
20
Length of filaments doesn’t change but the degree of overlap does sliding filament hypothesis The degree of overlap is important for generating tension Specifically the number of cross-bridges
21
Stimulator Sarcomere length ( m) Relative tension 1.25 1.65 2 2.25 3.65 1.0 0.5 Control muscle length Length – Tension relationship for single sarcomere Measure tension
22
Sarcomere length ( m) Relative tension 1.25 1.65 2 2.25 3.65 1.0 0.5 5 4 3 2 1 1 2 3 4 5
23
At maximum stretch no overlap At peak tension optimal overlap As sarcomere shortens filaments interfere
24
Summary Muscles made of myofibrils Myofibrils have sarcomeres Functional unit of muscle contraction Thick and thin filaments give a banding pattern (myosin and actin) With contraction sarcomere length changes Maximum tension produced with optimal overlap of filaments
25
Next Class BGYB30 Pose-Off Winner 2002 Winner 2003
26
Myosin Tail assembles into filaments Head binds Actin ATPase Myosin Light Chains S2 Link
27
protein filaments of the sarcomere Actin filament Myosin filament Actin filament ‘cross bridges’
28
Myosin filament ~150 cross-bridges at each end of the myosin filament Myosin self-assembles into filaments
29
Actin filaments F-Actin (flimanetous) assembles from G-actin (globular) Actin has myosin binding sites
31
Myofilament chemistry Actin + myosin Actomyosin complex Actin + myosin Actomyosin complex ATP
32
Myosin-ATP Myosin-ADP-Pi Myosin +ADP +Pi Myosin-ADP-Pi + Actin Actomyosin + ADP + Pi Very slow! Very fast! Releases energy Actin rate of ATP hydrolysis by myosin
33
Myosin-ADP-Pi binds Actin weakly Myosin-ADP Head rotates ADP is released and ATP binds Myosin Myosin-ATP released from Actin Myosin hydrolyzes ATP ADP+Pi Myosin-ADP binds Actin strongly Pi Myosin-ATP Actin-Myosin Cycle
34
Transition between weakly bound and strongly bound complex generates tension
35
Myosin filament Myosin head group S2 link Actin filament Binding sites Stretching of the link generates tension Weak binding Strong binding
37
Equal and opposite force on thick filament Why do thin filaments move? Net force
38
Actin + myosin Actomyosin complex ATP What if we don’t have this? X Rigor mortis
39
Role of calcium Intracellular Calcium is required for muscle contraction Used ‘skinned’ muscle fibers Membranes chemically removed just protein components left Calcium concentration (mM) Relative force 1.0 0.01 0.1 1.0
40
Role of calcium Troponin complex Tropomyosin Troponin and Tropomyosin bind to actin block the actin – myosin binding sites Troponin is a calcium binding protein
41
When Troponin binds calcium it moves Tropomyosin away from the actin-myosin binding site Ca
42
Summary Myosin binds to Actin in ADP/ATP- dependent manner Transition from weak to strong bond rotates myosin head group Lengthening of the link generates tension Calcium is required to remove Troponin- Tropomyosin from the binding sites
43
Where does Calcium come from? Intracellular storage called Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Surround each myofibril of the whole muscle Contains high concentration of calcium Transverse Tubules connects plasma membrane to deep inside muscle
44
Text Fig 10-21 Myofibril Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Transverse tubules
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.