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MUSCLES

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Title: MUSCLES


1
MUSCLES
  • Skeletal
  • Smooth
  • Cardiac

2
MEMBRANE POTENTIAL
  • Electrical potential
  • all cells
  • sodium and potassium
  • Sodium 12X higher outside
  • Potassium 40X higher inside

Na
K
K Na
3
MEMBRANE POTENTIAL
  • Difference in charge across membranes
  • 1. Na/K pump
  • 3 Na pumped extracellular 2 K pumped
    intracellular
  • accounts for about _____ of the energy
    requirements of the nervous system
  • 2 proteins inside
  • _______________charged
  • 3. K diffuses out ___________ X faster than Na
    diffuses in
  • Resting potential
  • -70 millivolts (mV)

4
MEMBRANE POTENTIAL
  • Ion Channels
  • Two basic types
  • 1. Leakage (nongated) channels
  • passive channels
  • always ____________
  • 2. Gated or Active Channels

5
GATED CHANNELS
  • 1. Voltage gated (regulated) ion channel
  • Trigger is change in the membrane potential
  • Na, K and Ca voltage regulated gates
  • 2. Chemically gated ion channel
  • Opens and closes in response to specific chemical
    stimuli
  • Chemicals- hormones, neurotransmitters, ions such
    as H and Ca
  • Most important are for Na K

6
GATED CHANNELS
  • 3. Mechanically gated ion channel
  • Open or close in response to touch, vibration or
    pressure
  • Examples - Meissner and Pacinian corpuscles
  • 4. Light gated ion channel
  • Open and close in response to light
  • Found in rods and cones of the eye

7
ACTION POTENTIAL
  • Event 1
  • Na permeability ____________ 5000 X
  • 20,000 Na ions diffuse thru Na voltage gates
  • Area of membrane reverses its charge
  • Muscle or nerve becomes ________________

8
ACTION POTENTIAL
  • Event 2
  • Instantaneously following the Na leakage, gates
    for _________ close
  • Voltage gates for ________ open
  • Permeability increases _______ X
  • Repolarization

9
ACTION POTENTIAL
  • Role of Ca
  • __________ for Na channels
  • Ions that move across the membranes
  • 1/100,000 to 1/500,000 of the ions
  • Importance? _____________________
  • Ionic flow
  • Enough Na ions are bled off ________________ area
    that Na gates open and AP begins

10
ACTION POTENTIAL
  • Spike potential
  • Action potential
  • Na leak followed by K leak
  • Lasts 0.4 ________
  • Negative afterpotential
  • Excess K leaks out
  • Na/K pump

11
ACTION POTENTIAL
  • Threshold
  • Potential that must be reached to trigger an
    action potential
  • All-or-none law
  • AP same velocity, same intensity, same time span
  • Refractory period
  • _______________
  • Time from Na channels open until K channels close
  • _______________
  • Time from K channels closed until Resting
    Potential is reached

12
MUSCLE
  • about 40 of body is skeletal muscle
  • another 5-10 is smooth and cardiac muscle
  • classify according to location
  • a. skeletal- attached to bone
  • - 700 different muscles
  • b. smooth- internal structures
  • c. cardiac- heart

13
MUSCLE
  • classify according to activity
  • a. ______________ - skeletal
  • b. ______________- smooth and cardiac
  • skeletal may also be voluntary

14
CONNECTIVE TISSUE COVERINGS
  • Epimysium
  • Entire muscle
  • Perimysium
  • Surrounds fascicles
  • Endomysium
  • Surrounds individual muscle cells

15
ATTACHMENTS
  • proximal attachment
  • epimysium fuses with ______________ or
    perichondrium
  • indirect attachment
  • aponeuroses- ___________
  • tendons- ______________
  • certain tendons such as those of wrist and ankle
    are enclosed by tubes of connective tissue called
    ____________________

16
ATTACHMENTS
  • ______________- to less moveable end of the
    bone, generally proximal
  • _______________- to more moveable end of a bone,
    usually distal

17
HISTOLOGY - MUSCLE CELL
  • sarcoplasm cytoplasm
  • may contain an abundance of glycogen and
    myoglobin
  • sarcolemma plasma membrane
  • multiple nuclei
  • mitochondria
  • sarcoplasmic reticulum- smooth ER
  • T-tubules -- tunnel-like infoldings
  • myofibrils
  • 100s lying in parallel are found in a muscle cell

18
HISTOLOGY - Myofibrils
  • A band, anisotropic band
  • M line
  • H Zone
  • I band, isotropic band
  • Z line- Zwischenscheibe means disc
  • Sarcomere
  • functional contractile unit of the muscle fiber

19
THIN MYOFILAMENTS
  • actin
  • single units - G or globular actin, each has an
    active site
  • linear stands- F or fibrous actin
  • tropomyosin
  • thread-like along surface of actin
  • each covers 7 active sites of actin
  • troponin
  • complex of 3 globular proteins
  • One (I) has affinity for actin
  • One (T) has affinity for tropomyosin
  • One (C) has affinity for calcium

20
THICK MYOFILAMENTS
  • each myofilament contains about 500 myosins
  • myosin
  • made up of two identical subunits
  • 2 bulbous heads- called cross bridges
  • connection between head and tail functions as a
    hinge
  • central area which contains no cross bridges is
    called bare zone
  • each thick filament has a core of titin which
    will recoil after stretching

21
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22
CONTRACTIONSLIDING FILAMENT THEORY
  • 1. Exposure of active sites
  • calcium ions bind to _____________
  • causes troponin to change shape and pull
    ________________ off of active sites of
    _________
  • 2. Attachment of crossbridges
  • when active sites are exposed, the myosin
    cross-bridges ___________ to them

23
CONTRACTION
  • 3. Pivoting Power Stroke
  • _____________ in myosin head is released causing
    the myosin head to tilt
  • tilting of the head pulls the actin
  • ADP and P are released from the head
  • 4. Detachment of cross-bridges
  • once cross bridge is tilted, shape change exposes
    a site in head where _________ can bind
  • binding of ATP causes head to ____________ from
    the actin

24
CONTRACTION
  • 5. Reactivation of myosin
  • ATP cleaved once head detaches from actin, ATP
    cleaves to form ADP and P and releases energy
  • myosin head contains an enzyme called myosin
    _______________ which releases energy from ATP
  • crossbridge to tilt back to its original
    perpendicular position
  • energizes the crossbridge
  • 6. Rebinds with new active site
  • or
  • 6. Relaxes

25
SINGLE CONTRACTION
  • each contraction shortens muscle by about ____
  • - each head can carry out about 5 strokes per
    second and each cycle of the head consumes one
    molecule of ATP
  • skeletal muscle can shorten up to ______

26
NEUROMUSCULAR JUNCTION
  • usually one junction located near middle of
    muscle fiber
  • ________ receptors located on motor end plate of
    muscle
  • Muscle potential
  • muscle resting potential -90 mV
  • duration 1-5 msec, 5 times longer than in large
    myelinated nerve fibers
  • velocity 3-5 meters per sec, 1/18th velocity of
    large myelinated nerve fibers that excites the
    muscle

27
RELAXATION
  • acetyl cholinesterase (AChE)
  • enzyme released into synaptic cleft
  • breaks down ACh into _________ and __________
  • Calcium pump in the ____________________ removes
    Ca from around the myofilaments
  • Ca binds to a protein called calsequestrin in the
    sarcoplasmic reticulum
  • troponin changes shape pulling the ____________
    back onto the active sites of _________

28
RELAXATION
  • Muscle returns to its resting length because of
    two forces
  • 1. Elastic components recoil
  • 2. Contraction of antagonist muscle helps
    lengthen the relaxed muscle

29
TRANSVERSE TUBULES
  • impulse flows down to the interior
  • T tubules rest on __________________
  • impulse stimulates SR to release _______ around
    the myofibrils
  • as long as impulses continue, Ca will be released
  • continually active Ca pump continually
    concentrates Ca ___________ X higher in the
    interior of the SR

30
PATHOLOGIES
  • Rigor mortis - no ___________
  • muscle begins to stiffen 3 - 4 hours after death
  • peaks at about 12 hours and diminishes over the
    next 48-60 hours
  • Curare
  • from resin of a South American tree
  • binds to ___________ receptors only on the motor
    end plate of _____________ muscle
  • Myasthenia gravis
  • abnormal production of antibodies that destroy
    ACh receptors

31
SOURCES OF ENERGYANAEROBIC
  • 1. ATP
  • ATP --gt _______ ________ Energy
  • 2 seconds
  • 2. Creatine phosphate
  • ADP CP --gt _______ _____________
  • 15 seconds
  • uses enzyme __________________
  • damaged muscle from skeletal or heart muscle can
    leak ___________________ into the blood

32
SOURCES OF ENERGYANAEROBIC
  • 3. Glycogen --gt glucose --gt ______________
  • produces only ______ ATPs per glucose
  • produces ATP 2.5 faster than aerobic
  • 30 - 40 seconds
  • causes ________ to drop
  • decreases enzyme activity, muscle contraction
    cannot continue
  • _____ of lactic acid diffuses into blood
  • heart, kidney and liver cells can use lactic acid
    to produce ATP

33
SOURCES OF ENERGYAEROBIC
  • 1. ATP
  • ATP --gt ADP P Energy
  • 2. Creatine phosphate
  • ADP CP --gt ATP creatine

34
SOURCES OF ENERGYAEROBIC
  • 3. Glucose --gt __________ and _____________
  • mitochondria
  • oxygen
  • generates _______ ATPs per glucose
  • resting cell -- _______ of its energy
  • in activities that last more than ______ minutes,
    provides 90 of ATP

35
OXYGEN DEBT OR RECOVERY PERIOD
  • heavy breathing is triggered by drop in ______
  • repay oxygen debt
  • lactic acid --gt _____________ acid
  • mostly in the ___________
  • reestablish ______________ reserves in skeletal
    muscle
  • reestablish creatine phosphate reserves
  • reestablish ATP reserves
  • replace oxygen removed from ________________ and
    hemoglobin

36
Muscle Supplements - Creatine
  • Creatine accounts for 180 million of the 800
    million spent on all sports supplements spent in
    1998
  • Oral supplements with high doses of creatine
    resulted in 20 increase in skeletal muscle
    creatine
  • Possible positive results
  • creatine may enhance anaerobic ATP production
    during maximal exercise
  • creatine phosphate production may be enhanced
  • muscle size may increase

37
Muscle Supplements - Creatine
  • Potential adverse effects
  • Muscle cramping
  • increased water retention increases the pressure
    on muscle
  • Gastrointestinal effects
  • diarrhea and gastrointestinal pain
  • Renal dysfunction
  • short-term (5 days) creatine supplementation does
    not appear to impair kidney function
  • Dehydration
  • water retention can increase the risk of
    dehydration

38
Muscle Supplements 4-androstenedione and
steroids
  • Androstenedione is a prohormone
  • converted in the liver and testes to testosterone
  • not known if the elevated testosterone levels
    translate into greater muscle mass
  • Anabolic steroid are synthetic forms of
    testosterone

39
MUSCLE FATIGUE
  • poorly understood
  • ATP production fails to keep pace with ATP
    utilization
  • anaerobic
  • pH drop (______________ acid buildup)
  • exhaustion of ATP and CP reserves
  • aerobic
  • deplete glycogen, lipid and protein reserves
  • diminished supplies of oxygen
  • buildup of carbon dioxide and lactic acid
  • physical damage to _____________________

40
OXYGEN SUPPLY
  • muscle contains oxygen binding protein called
    ________________________
  • globular protein is related to hemoglobin
  • myoglobin rich cells can contract for longer
    periods
  • ________ fibers
  • myoglobin poor cells often contract faster
  • _________ fibers

41
HEAT PRODUCTION
  • efficiency of muscle contraction
  • at rest ______ of energy is captured, _______
    is released as heat
  • active skeletal muscle releases 85 of energy as
    heat
  • contributes to maintenance of _______________
  • if body becomes too cold
  • shivering mechanism- heat can rise 4-5 times
    above normal

42
TYPES OF CONTRACTIONS
  • 1. Isometric
  • muscle attempts to move a load greater than the
    force the muscle can develop
  • constant _______________
  • ______________ increases greatly
  • energy released as ____________ instead of work
  • no work being done since object does not move
  • causes muscle to hypertrophy to a greater extent
  • does little for __________________ system

43
TYPES OF CONTRACTIONS
  • 2. Isotonic
  • constant ______________
  • muscle length changes, work is being done
  • increases vascularity to skeletal and cardiac
    muscle
  • two types
  • a. Concentric - muscle tension exceeds
    resistance - muscle _____________
  • B. Eccentric - muscle tension does not exceed
    resistance - muscle _____________

44
MUSCLE FIBERS - BASIS
  • efficiency of myosin-ATPase
  • fast or slow
  • amount of myoglobin
  • red or white
  • predominant pathway for ATP
  • aerobic or anaerobic

45
FAST FIBERS, TYPE II-A (IIx) FIBERS
  • most of the skeletal muscle fibers are fast
    fibers
  • probably about 1/2 of fibers are these
  • characteristics
  • fast acting myosin ATPase
  • fatigues fast
  • small amount of ________________ -- white
  • anaerobic pathway for ATP (glycolysis --gt lactic
    acid)
  • large in diameter - about ______ times slow
    twitch fibers
  • large ______________ reserves
  • few mitochondria
  • suitable for _____________________ contractions
  • example muscles that control fingers and eyes

46
SLOW FIBERS, TYPE I (I) FIBERS
  • characteristics
  • slow acting myosin ATPase
  • fatigue resistant
  • large amount of myoglobin -- red
  • aerobic pathway for ATP
  • half the diameter and takes _______ times longer
    to contract after stimulation
  • many _________________
  • relies more on breakdown of stored _____________
    rather than glycogen
  • more extensive capillary system
  • example postural muscles of spine

47
INTERMEDIATE FIBERSTYPE II-B (IIa)FIBERS
  • resemble fast fibers
  • characteristics
  • fast acting myosin ATPase
  • fatigues slower than fast because have more
    extensive capillary system
  • small amount of myoglobin -- white
  • anaerobic pathway for ATP
  • intermediate amounts of mitochondria

48
TRAINING
  • long distance running
  • IIX (fast/anaerobic)) --gt I (slow, aerobic)
  • weight lifting
  • IIX --gt IIA
  • stop weight lifting
  • IIA --gt IIX
  • building muscle - can increase size (not number)
    of cells by 25
  • muscle tears and attracts satellite cells which
    fuse to muscle and add their nuclei
  • builds more muscle protein
  • Training for anaerobic events
  • IIX --gt IIA
  • stop for a week before an event, IIA --gt IIX

49
TWITCH CONTRACTION
  • simplest muscle contraction
  • a single stimulus-contraction-relaxation sequence
  • 7.5 msec to 100 msec
  • isolated twitch is a __________ phenomenon
  • periods - 100 msec twitch
  • a. _________________ period
  • period between application of stimulus and
    beginning of contraction
  • about 10 msec
  • b. ______________ period - about 40 msec
  • c. ______________ period - about 50 msec

50
TWITCH CONTRACTION
51
TREPPE CONTRACTION
  • muscle relaxed for a long time
  • muscle contracts more ____________ in response to
    same strength of a stimulus after it has
    contracted several times
  • rationale
  • Ca concentration increases
  • temperature increases

52
WAVE SUMMATION
  • same stimulus
  • second stimulus arrives _______________
    relaxation phase completed, a second more
    powerful contraction occurs
  • rationale
  • increased Ca release
  • energy is put into contraction and not tightening
    of tendons and muscles

53
TETANIZATION
  • increase frequency and/or magnitude of stimulus
  • frequency is finally reached at which successive
    contractions ____________ together
  • incomplete tetany
  • complete tetany
  • ___________ does not have time to be reabsorbed
    into the sarcoplasmic reticulum
  • ___________ muscle action
  • not same as tetanus produced by Clostridium
    tetani

54
TETANIZATION
55
TONUS CONTRACTION
  • sustained ________________ contraction
  • tightens muscle but not enough to produce
    movement
  • _______________ muscle cells do not function
    continually
  • essential for maintaining posture

56
MOTOR UNIT
  • all muscles fibers innervated by a single
    ____________________
  • average size 150 muscle fibers
  • laryngeal muscle- 2-3 fibers
  • gastrocnemius- 1900 fibers
  • motor unit summation
  • activate _____________ motor units first
  • asynchronous motor unit summation
  • motor units activated on a _____________ basis
  • less than maximum tension

57
MUSCLE ACTIONS
  • agonist or prime mover
  • antagonist
  • synergist
  • fixator

58
SMOOTH VS SKELETAL MUSCLE
  • nucleus
  • skeletal is multinuclear
  • smooth - single
  • size
  • skeletal muscle is 20X larger in diameter and
    1000X longer
  • sarcoplasmic reticulum
  • skeletal - well developed SR
  • smooth - poorly developed

59
SMOOTH MUSCLE CELLS
Longitudinal Section
Cross Section
60
SMOOTH VS SKELETAL MUSCLE
  • T system
  • skeletal - well developed
  • smooth - no T system but caveolae- shallow
    grooves that may function as a T system
  • ratio of thick to thin myofilaments
  • skeletal - 1 thick 2 thin
  • smooth - 1 thick 15 thin myofilaments
  • Z bands, sarcomeres, striations
  • none in smooth, found in skeletal
  • smooth - has dense bodies that are equivalent of
    Z lines - attach to actin

61
SMOOTH VS SKELETAL MUSCLE
  • Protein that combines with calcium
  • skeletal uses troponin
  • smooth uses calmodulin
  • associated with myosin
  • activates an enzyme called myosin light-chain
    kinase which activates myosin ATPase which
    hydrolyzes the ATP and causes the power stroke
  • Nervous system control
  • skeletal - somatic motor nervous system
  • smooth - autonomic nervous system
  • each branch has 20,000 varicosities along its
    length that release neurotransmitters
  • there is no motor end plate
  • Ca source
  • skeletal - sarcoplasmic reticulum
  • smooth- extracellular fluid

62
SMOOTH VS SKELETAL MUSCLE
  • control mechanism
  • skeletal - neural, single neuromuscular junction
  • smooth - neural, spontaneous, hormonal, oxygen
    and carbon dioxide levels, irritation, stretching
  • contraction
  • skeletal - rapid onset, tetanization, fatigues
    rapid
  • takes 50 - 100 msec
  • smooth - slow onset, may tetanize, resistant to
    fatigue
  • takes 1 - 2 seconds

63
SMOOTH MUSCLE - CONTRACTED
64
SMOOTH VS SKELETAL MUSCLE
  • Energy source
  • skeletal - aerobic or anaerobic with intense
    activity
  • smooth - aerobic - takes only 1 of energy as
    skeletal
  • Division
  • skeletal - fission
  • smooth - hyperplasia

65
SMOOTH VS SKELETAL MUSCLE
  • Change in length
  • skeletal - 40
  • 20 shorter to 20 longer
  • smooth - 150
  • 2X longer to 1/2 as long

66
SMOOTH MUSCLE TYPES
  • 1. multiunit
  • composed of discrete smooth muscle fibers
  • each operate ________________
  • individual fibers separated by glycoprotein
  • control is exerted almost entirely by
    __________________
  • ex. iris of eye, arrector pili muscle, large
    blood vessels

67
SMOOTH MUSCLE TYPES
  • 2. unitary or visceral
  • most common
  • arranged in bundles or sheets and cell membrane
    contact each other via __________ junctions
  • usually 2 sheets
  • a. longitudinal
  • b. circular
  • contraction spreads as ______________ waves
  • not all muscle cells are innervated by neurons
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