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Published byBriana Stephens Modified over 9 years ago
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Finish whole muscle physiology Start hormones / endocrinology
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Tension Vm ‘twitch’ Muscle AP Time latency Why latency? –In part due to time for all biochemical reactions –Also due to elastic components of the muscle Tendons, connective tissue, cross-bridge links
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Contractile component Series elastic component Parallel Elastic Component
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Rest Contraction initiated Sarcomere shortens Series elastic component stretches but no muscle shortening Tension generation Sarcomere shortens further muscle shortens Text fig 10-26
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Whole muscle summary 4 types of skeletal muscle fibers Neural control of contraction –Twitches and tetanus –Motor units & size principal Generation of muscle force –Elastic components of muscle Non-twitch muscles –Graded contractions
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Muscle Diseases Duchenne muscular dystrophy –Muscle wasting disease –Affects 1 in 3500 boys –Life expectancy ~20 years Genetic disease –Complete absence of the protein ‘dystrophin’
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Muscle plasma membrane Dystrophin Actin cytoskeleton (not actin thin filaments) Dystroglycan Dystroglycan Grb2 Acetylcholine receptor Potential protein associations of dystrophin Extracellular matrix
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There are many effects of dystrophin absence including: –Altered calcium handling (too much inside) –Membrane destabilization (too permeable) –Susceptibility to mechanical damage
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Effects on neuromuscular physiology –Altered nACH receptor clusters –Reduced mepp size
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Cardiac & Smooth muscle –Contractile mechanisms (actin & myosin) the same as skeletal muscle –Structural and organizational differences
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Cardiac muscle –like skeletal muscle Striated Uses troponin/tropomyosin control Well developed SR and T-tubule network –Muscle cells are joined end-to-end, electrically connected by gap junctions –Contraction initiated within the muscle (myogenic) not by neural innervation
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Gap junctions
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Striated Skeletal muscle Smooth muscle Cardiac Skeletal muscle
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Smooth muscle –Less like skeletal muscle No visible striations No troponin/tropomyosin No SR or T-Tubules –Contraction regulated by calcium in several different ways
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End of muscle!
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Hormones Robert Wadlow –8’-11” tall –496 pounds –Size 37 shoe Too much growth hormone
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Hormones Topics: Types of hormones Signal transduction pathways Major Hormone systems Hormonal control of physiological processes
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Hormones Another form of communication Types of Secretion 1.Autocrine – affects the secreting cell 2.Paracrine – affects neighbouring cell 3.Endocrine – secreted into bloodstream 4.Exocrine – secreted onto body surface, including surface of gut
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Mechanisms of Secretion Neuron Neurosecretory cell Simple Endocrine Cell Ca++ Capillary Ca++ Intracellular Ca stores
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Neurosecretory cells –Work like all neurons Sensory Input APs secretion –Except secrete into bloodstream
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Secretory Pathway in Endocrine cells Nucleus Rough ER Golgi Exocytosis Ca++ Like synaptic vesicle secretion, these steps also require SNARE proteins Secretory vesicle
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Two types of hormones Lipid Soluble –Steroid hormones (eg estrogen, testosterone) –Thyroid hormones Lipid Insoluble –Peptides and Proteins (eg insulin) –Catecholamines (eg adrenalin)
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Two types of hormones 1.Lipid-soluble Transcription & Translation long lasting effects Nuclear receptor Cytoplasmic receptor Carrier molecule Hormone molecule Nucleus
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Two types of hormones 2.Lipid-insoluble Cellular effects Hormone molecule Plasma membrane receptor Second Messenger Effector Protein
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Signal Transduction Signal Reception, Transduction Amplification Second Messengers Regulators Cellular Response Specific Effectors
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