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Muscle Physiology Part Two

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In muscle contraction, 2 major processes require energy expenditure: ... precision of movement possible e.g motor units in primate fingers & human tongue ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Muscle Physiology Part Two


1
Muscle Physiology Part Two
  • Energetics Neuronal Control of Muscle
    Contraction
  • Cardiac Muscle
  • Smooth Muscle

2
Energetics of Muscle Contraction
  • In muscle contraction, 2 major processes require
    energy expenditure
  • Hydrolysis of ATP by myosin cross-bridges as they
    cyclically attach detach from actin thin
    filaments
  • Pumping Ca2 back into SR against a Ca2
    concentration gradient (requires 2 molecules of
    ATP for each ion of Ca2)

3
Energetics of Muscle Contraction
  • During a twitch, certain amount of Ca2 is
    released following the AP exactly that amount
    must be pumped back into the SR if the muscle
    fiber is to relax (vs. cramp)
  • Both ATP Ca2 are required for muscles to
    contract but relaxation occurs only in the
    presence of ATP and absence of Ca2
  • Ca2 pump accounts for 25-30 of total ATPase
    activity during muscle contraction

4
Energetics of Muscle Contraction
  • As well as ATP, muscle contain 2nd high-energy
    molecule, creatine phosphate (aka
    phosphocreatine)
  • Creatine phosphokinase transfers high-energy
    phosphate from creatine phosphate to ADP,
    regenerating ATP so quickly that the ATP
    concentration remains constant even when the
    muscle is using energy at a high rate

5
Energetics of Muscle Contraction
  • If muscle runs out of ATP, it goes into rigor
    (rigor mortis rigidity that develops in a dying
    muscle as ATP becomes depleted cross-bridges
    remain attached) rigor is relieved only by
    removal Ca2 addition of ATP fig. 10-17 p. 382
  • During high intensity, short-duration activity
    (running down prey or running away from predator)
    ATP may be used up too fast to be replenished by
    ATP hydrolysis therefore, continuous
    rephosphorylation of ADP by creatine
    phosphokinase keeps muscles supplied with ATP for
    a short time animals life may depend on this
    short-lived extra source of energy

6
Diverse Muscle Activities
  • Adaptations for
  • jumping (frogs)
  • running (horse)
  • swimming (fish)
  • making noise (rattlesnake)
  • flying (dragonfly)

7
Neuronal Control of Muscle Contraction
  • Movement requires contraction of many fibers
    within a muscle of many muscles within the body
    correctly timed with one another regulating
    the strength of contraction
  • Coordination generated within NS most muscle
    contract only when APs arrive at NMJ

8
Motor Control in Vertebrates
  • Vertebrate muscles arranged in antagonistic pairs
    (fig 10-45 p. 411)
  • E.g. muscle pulls on a joint, causing it to close
    (flexor) its action is opposed by the muscle that
    causes the joint to open (extensor)
  • Each vertebrate skeletal muscle is innervated by
    motor neurons whose somata are located in ventral
    horn of gray matter of the spinal or (or some in
    particular parts of brain)

9
Motor Control in Vertebrates
  • Axon of spinal motor neuron leaves spinal cord
    through a ventral root, continues to muscle by
    way of a peripheral nerve branches repeatedly
    to innervate skeletal muscle fibers
  • Single motor neuron may innervate only a few
    fibers or a 100 or more
  • In vertebrates, each muscle fiber receives input
    form only one motor neuron

10
Motor Control in Vertebrates
  • Collection of motor neurons that innervate
    particular muscle motor pool
  • Somata of each motor pool clustered together in
    ventral horn of spinal cord segment that is
    relatively near the location of that muscle
  • Motor unit motor neuron muscle fibers that it
    innervates in vertebrates motor units typically
    consist of 100 muscle fibers

11
Motor Control in Vertebrates
  • Size of motor units in a muscle determines the
    precision of movement possible e.g motor units in
    primate fingers human tongue extremely small,
    permitting very finely modulated movements,
    whereas motor units in big muscles of truck are
    very large
  • When AP is initiated in a motor neuron, membrane
    excitation spreads to all its terminal branches,
    activating all of its endplates fig. 612 p. 171
    ACh released as noted previously

12
Summation
  • contraction of individual muscle fibers is
    all-or-none - any graded response must come from
    the number of motor units stimulated at any one
    time
  • summation adding together of individual muscle
    twitches to make a whole muscle contraction -
    accomplished by increasing number of motor units
    contracting at one time (spatial summation) or by
    increasing frequency of contraction of individual
    muscle contractions (temporal summation)

13
Summation cont
  • processes almost always occur simultaneously
    within normal muscle contraction
  • Muscle fatigue Prolonged strong contractions
    leads to fatigue due to inability of contractile
    metabolic processes to supply adequately to
    maintain the work load - nerve continues to
    function properly passing AP onto the muscle
    fibers but contractions become weaker due to lack
    of ATP
  • Hypertrophy - increase in muscle mass caused by
    forceful muscular activity increase power of
    muscle contraction
  • Atrophy - when a muscle is not used for a length
    of time or is used for only weak contractions

14
Motor Control in Vertebrates
  • Pattern of muscle contraction around a joint
    depends on patterns of activity in motor pools of
    different muscles when motor pool of flexors
    are active (excited), neurons in motor pool
    controlling antagonistic extensors receive
    inhibitory input if both are active
    simultaneously, position of joint is locked

15
Functional Terms
  • Flexor vs. Extensor
  • Abductor vs. Adductor
  • Levatator vs. Depressor
  • Pronator (turn forearm so palm downward) vs.
    Suppinator (turn forearm so palm upward)
  • Rotator
  • Sphincter
  • Dialator

16
Functions of Skeletal Muscle
  • provide skeletal movement
  • maintain posture and body position
  • support soft tissues
  • guard entrances and exits
  • maintain body temperature

17
Cardiac Muscle - Overview
  • found in the walls of the heart
  • under control of the ANS
  • cardiac muscle cell has one central nucleus,
    unlike skeletal muscle (multinucleated), but it
    also is striated, like skeletal muscle
  • is rectangular/elongated in shape tapered at
    both ends
  • contraction is involuntary, strong, and
    rhythmical.

18
Cardiac Muscle cont
  • Individual fibers connected to neighboring fibers
    by gap junctions especially at structures called
    intercalated disks (allow electric current to
    pass unimpeded between cardiac muscle fibers)
  • Fibers are tightly bound together by anchoring
    structures desmosomes

19
Cardiac Muscle contTypes of Muscle fibers in
Heart
  • Contractile striated and contain many
    myofibrils made up of sarcomeres elaborate SR
    T-tubules
  • Conducting (include pacemaker fibers) dont
    resemble most muscle fibers dont contract
    lack contractile proteins instead function as
    signal-transmission system rapidly spreading
    electrical signals thru heart by way of gap
    junctions

20
Cardiac Muscle cont
  • Contractions are myogenic initiated in muscle
    fibers themselves
  • Electrical signal arises endogenously in
    pacemaker fibers spreads as APs thru heart
  • Cardiac muscle dont depend on neuronal input to
    initiate or sustain contraction - cardiac muscle
    fibers do receive input from neurons of SNS PSN
    however, it produces no discrete postsynaptic
    potentials but serves a modulatory role
    strength rate of cardiac muscle contractions
    are increased by input form SNS decreased by PNS

21
Cardiac Muscle cont
  • AP here differs from skeletal muscle in that
    rather than being very brief, it is longer has
    a plateau phase hundreds of milliseconds long
    following the upstroke this prevents tetanic
    contraction permits muscle to relax
  • Regularly paced, prolonged APs heart contracts
    relaxes at a rate suitable for its function as
    a pump

22
Cardiac Muscle cont
  • Contraction activated when cytosolic Ca2
    concentration rises which in cardiac muscles
    depends on influx of Ca2 across plasma membrane
    plus its release from SR (Elaborate SR T-tubule
    system)
  • Long plateau of AP depends on influx of Ca2
    through voltage-gated Ca2 channels
  • Intracellular Ca2 determined by depolarization
    AND other factors including action of
    catecholamines (epinephrine norepinephrine)

23
Smooth Muscle - Overview
  • found in the walls of the hollow internal organs
    (e.g. blood vessels, bladder, GIT, and uterus)
  • under control of the ANS cannot be controlled
    consciously involuntary (one exception may be
    urinary bladder?)
  • non-striated (I.e. smooth), spindle-shaped cells
    with one central nucleus
  • Lack sacromeres
  • contracts slowly and rhythmically

24
Smooth Muscle cont
  • Primarily supports visceral functions rather than
    locomotion other behavior
  • Some similarities differences from both cardiac
    and skeletal muscles - can be divided into
    subclasses each different
  • Some can produce more force per cross-sectional
    area than striated muscles and some can generate
    prolonged contractions that require much less
    energy per unit time than striated muscle

25
Smooth Muscle cont
  • Sliding-filament theory applies
  • Generally with little or no SR lack T-tubules
  • Rather than sacromere organization gathered
    into bundles of thick and thin filaments anchored
    in structures called dense bodies or connect to
    inside surface of plasma membrane at sites called
    attachment plaques

26
Smooth Muscle Categories
  • Single-unit smooth muscles small, elongated and
    tapered at both ends coupled with one another
    thru electrically conducting gap junctions
    activation of a few fibers can generate
    contraction that moves thruout the entire organ
    in a wave e.g. peristalsis in GIT pushing food
    along called single-unit because entire set of
    fibers behaves as a unit rather than a set of
    independently controlled fibers

27
Smooth Muscle Categories cont
  • Multi-unit smooth muscles act independently
    contract only when stimulated by neurons or in
    some cases hormones contraction is neurogenic
    not coupled to one another by gap junctions e.g.
    muscles regulate diameter of pupil in iris and
    those in walls of blood vessels

28
Smooth Muscles cont
  • Synapses of autonomic neurons with smooth muscle
    fibers are different form endplates formed by
    motor neurons NT released from many swellings
    called varicosities along length of autonomic
    axons diffuses over some distance encountering
    many smooth muscle cells along the way receptor
    molecules on smooth muscle cells appear to be
    distributed diffusely over the cell surface

29
Regulation of Smooth Muscle Contraction
  • As in striated muscles, cyclic binding
    unbinding of myosin actin myofilaments depends
    on presence of free Ca2 in cytoplasm
  • Contract relax more slowly than striated
    muscles are capable of more sustained
    contraction
  • Slow release uptake of Ca2 associated with
    relatively underdeveloped SR (composed only of
    smooth, flat vesicles located close to inner
    surface of plasma membrane)

30
Regulation of Smooth Muscles cont
  • because of elongated shape no point in
    cytoplasm is gt few micrometers away from plasma
    membrane diffusion of Ca2 between membrane
    myofilaments is sufficient for regulating slow
    contraction plasma membrane cells performs
    Ca-regulating function similar to those of SR in
    striated muscle

31
Regulation of Smooth Muscle cont
  • In striated muscle, troponin tropomysin control
    access to myosin binding sites however, smooth
    muscles lack troponin but have the filamentous
    protein caldesmon binds to thin filaments
    preventing binding between myosin actin
  • Caldesmon removed by 2 mechanisms
  • Calmodulin Ca2 binding protein when
    calmodulin/Ca2 complex binds to caldesmon,
    myosin cross-bridges are permitted to bind to
    thin filaments OR
  • Caldesmon may be phosphorylated by protein kinase
    C (when phosphorylated cant bind to thin
    filaments doesnt inhibit myosin-actin
    interactions)

32
Unusual Features
  • Sensitive to mechanical stimulation e.g.
    stretching smooth muscles can cause
    depolarization this accounts for auto
    regulation seen in small arterioles increase in
    BP stretches smooth muscles in walls of
    arterioles leading to muscle contract helps to
    maintain relatively constant blood flow in
    peripheral tissues muscles in GIT performing
    peristalsis also rely in part on stretch-induced
    contractions of single-unit smooth muscle
    stretch activation

33
Unusual Features cont
  • Smooth muscles are specialize to maintain
    contracted state for long periods of time while
    expending minimum amount of energy (here rate of
    cross-bridge cycling drops radically when
    contraction is prolonged drastically reducing
    energy cost unlike skeletal muscles) called
    latch (vertebrates) or catch (invertebrates)
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