11.1 - 11.3
alpha-actinin
- found in the Z disc - binds to actin molecules of the thin filament and to titin
Myosin
-A contractile protein present in muscle fibers that aids in contraction and makes up the majority of muscle fiber -functions as a motor protein
H zone
-thick filaments only -In the center of A bands
I band
-thin filaments only -located at the end of A bands -Z disc pass through the center -Isotropic
Most plentiful proteins in skeletal muscles
1. actin 2. myosin 3. Titin
Which molecules has a ATP-binding site? 1) Tropomyosin 2) troponin 3) myosin 4) actin
3) myosin
What is the neurotransmitter released at the neuromuscular junction?
ACh
Myosin heads have binding sites for _____.
ATP and actin
Which types of muscles have Transverse Tubules
Cardiac and skeletal
3 proteins myofibrils are built from
Contractile protein Regulatory protein Structural protein
4 Special muscle properties
Electrical Excitability Contractility Extensibility Elasticity
Does ACh have a excitatory or inhibitory effect on neuromuscular transmission?
Excitatory
True or false ? Myosin are known as thick filaments
False
True or false? Tropomyosin is known as thin filaments
False
True or false? To initiate muscle contraction Ca2+ binds to tropomyosin
False. Binds to troponin
True or False ? Muscle fibers continue to undergo division once fusion of myoblast has occurred
False. Once fusion has occurred, the muscle fibers loses its ability to undergo cell division
What are actin molecules known as ?
G actin for globular porteins
The storage form of glucose that is present in muscles cells is known as ?
Glycogen
During an iotonic muscle contraction what happens to the Hzone ?
It get shorter
True or false ? A thick filament contains about 300 myosin molecules
True
What stimulates a muscle fiber in order for it to contract ?
a somatic motor neuron
Sarcomere
a structural unit of a myofibril in striated muscle, consisting of a dark band and the nearer half of each adjacent pale band.
Extensibility
ability of muscle to stretch without being damaged
Electrical Excitability
ability to respond to certain stimuli by producing action potentials
Main component of the thin filament
actin
2 types of contractile proteins
actin and myosin
What does a thin filament contain ?
actin, troponin, tropomyosin
Where are sarcomeres found in which types of muscle?
cardiac and skeletal
Traid
formed by T tubules & 2 terminal cisternae
contractile proteins
generate force during contraction
regulatory proteins
help switch the contraction process on and off
Nebulin
helps maintain alignment of the thin filaments in the sarcomere
Sarcolmma
is the plasma membrane of a muscle fiber
Dystrophin
links the thin filaments to the integral proteins of the sarcolemma
satellite cells
myoblasts that persist in mature skeletal muscle
What happens during the power stroke of the contraction cycle?
myosin head pivots from 90 degrees angle to 45 degree angle
The synapse between a somatic motor neuron and a skeletal muscle fiber is known as .....
neuromuscular junction (NMJ)
troponin
regulatory protein that binds to actin, tropomyosin, and calcium
Filaments
smaller fibers located with in the myofibrils
M line
supporting proteins that hold the thick filaments together in the H zone
What happens at the onset of contraction ?
the sarcoplasmic reticulum release calcium ions into the sarcoplasm
2 types of filaments in the myofibril:
thick and thin (used for contraction)
structural proteins
titin, myomesin, nebulin, dystrophin
Regulatory proteins 2 types
tropomyosin and troponin
F actin
A fibrous protein made of a long chain of G actin molecules twisted into a helix; main protein of the thin myofilament
Tropomyosin
-A protein of muscle that forms a complex with troponin regulating the interaction of actin and myosin in muscular contraction -each tropomyosin molecule only covers 7 G actin molecules
contraction cycle steps
-ATP hydrolysis -Attachment of myosin to actin -Power stroke -Detachment of myosin from actin
Glycogen
-a large polysaccaride consisting of thousands of glucose molecules covalently linked together -serves as a storage form of glucose, can be used for ATP synthesis
Sarcoplasm
-cytoplasm of a muscle fiber -surrounded by the sarcolemma -have mitochondria inside which produce large amounts of ATP for muscle contraction
A bands
-dark bands from the presence of thick filaments -At the end of this band thick and thin filaments over lap -Anisotropic
Myomesin
-found in the M line -binds to titin and thick filaments to connect them together at the M line
titin (gigantic)
-helps stabilize the position of the thick filament -accounts for much of the extensibility & elasticity of myofibrils -Spans half a sarcomere, from Z disc to M line
Z disc
-separates one sarcomere from the next -Narrow, plate-shaped regions of dense protein material
Myoglobin
-stores oxygen until it is needed by the mitochondria to generate ATP -a red colored oxygen binding protein that is found only in a muscle
Transverse tubules (T-tubules)
-tiny invaginations or tunnel in from the plasma membrane -filled with extracellular fluid
NMJ 3 components
1) synaptic end bulb of a terminal branch of the somatic motor neuron 2) synaptic cleft 3) motor end plate
sliding filament mechanism
The explanation of how thick and thin filaments slide relative to one another during striated muscle contraction to decrease sarcomere length
Actin
Thin filament of protein found in muscles
Contractility
ability of muscle to contract forcefully when adequately stimulated generating movement & tension
Elasticity
ability of muscle to return to its original length & shape after contraction or extension
NMJ (neuromuscular junction) consists of
axon terminals, synaptic cleft, and junction folds
myoblast
embryonic cell that develops into a cell of muscle fiber
Myofibrils
extend through the sarcoplasm that contractile elements of the skeletal muscle fibers
2 main phases of the skeletal muscle action potential
1) depolarizing phase 2) repolarizing pahse