Chapter 10 Muscle Tissue
Contractile proteins contain?
Myosin and actin
Epimysium
Encircles whole muscle
Creatine phosphate is synthesized by?
Excess ATP
smooth muscle tissue is found in?
Found in walls of hollow internal structures (blood vessels, airways), most organs in the abdominopelvic cavity, and in skin attached to hair follicles
Satellite cells in muscle
Retain capacity to fuse and regenerate functional muscle fibers
Synapse occurs between which two parts of the muscle tissue?
Somatic motor neuron and a skeletal muscle fiber
maximum tension when at an optimal zone of overlap between?
thick and thin filaments
the zone of overlap of contains?
thick and thin filaments lie side by side
regulatory proteins contain?
tropomyosin and troponin
What are the four steps of the contraction cycle?
-ATP hydrolysis -attachment of myosin to actin to form cross bridges -power stroke, and detachment of myosin from actin
What is the process of excitation-contraction coupling?
-Action potential along sarcomere and into T tubules -Ca ions released from SR -Calcium combines with troponin -Conformational change -Troponin-tropomyosin complex moves -Myosin-binding sites free -Myosin heads bind to actin -Contraction cycle begins
What happens during the detachment of myosin from actin?
-Myosin head is still attached to actin -ADP binds to the myosin head -myosin head detaches from actin
The process of the power stroke is?
-Pocket on myosin head where the ADP is bound opens -rotates myosin head toward the centre of sarcomere -releases ADP -Myosin head detaches from the actin
What are the parts of the NMJ?
-Synaptic end bulb -Synaptic vesicles -Neurotransmitters (ACh) -Motor end plate -ACh receptors -Synaptic Cleft
What occurs during the attachment of myosin to actin to form cross bridges?
1. Myosin head is then energized 2. Myosin binding sites on actin 3. Releases previously hydrolyzed phosphate group
What is the process of the contraction cycle of a muscle?
1. SR releases Ca ions 2. Ca Ions bind to the troponin 3. Troponin-tropomyosin then uncover binding sites 4. Contraction cycle begins
thin filaments of myofibrils are about how big compared to thick?
1/2 the diameter of thick filaments
Creatine phosphate vs. ATP is?
3-6x more plentiful
Muscle constitues what percentage of total body weight?
40-50%
Sarcoplasmic Reticulum (SR)
A fluid-filled system of membranous sacs that encircles each myofibril
What is released across the synaptic cleft?
ACh
What occurs in ATP hydrolysis?
ATP is converted to ADP+Phosphate group and reaction energizes myosin head
Contractility
Ability of muscle tissue to contract forcefully when stimulated by an action potential
Elasticity
Ability of muscle tissue to return to its original length and shape after contraction or extension
Extensibility
Ability of muscle to stretch without being damaged, allows muscle to contract forcefully even if it is already stretched
Electrical excitability
Ability to respond to certain stimuli by producing electrical signals, such as action potentials (impulse)
Which two types of cellular respiration occur during muscle metabolism?
Anaerobic and aerobic respiration
Perimysium
Connective tissue surrounding a fascicle
What type of molecules are unique to muscle fibers?
Energy-rich molecules
Sarcolemma
Fiber's plasma membrane
What is the life process of making myoblasts?
Hundreds of myoblasts, fusion, mature skeletal muscle fiber
What occurs during excitation-contraction coupling?
Increased Ca Ions concentration in cytosol starts muscle contraction; a decrease stops it
deep layer of connective muscle tissue
Lines the body wall and limbs and holds muscles with similar functions together Allows free movement of muscles, carries nerve and blood and lymph vessels, and fills spaces between muscles
In muscle metabolism, production of ATP occurs in?
Muscle fibers
Connective tissues surround?
Muscle fibers and whole muscles
creatine phosphate is present in?
Muscle metabolism
muscle action potential arise at the?
Neuromuscular Junction(NMJ)
smooth muscle features
Non-striated, involuntary
Myoglobin
Oxygen-binding protein only in muscle fibers
What are the main functions of muscle tissue?
Producing body movements, stabilizing body positions, regulating organ volume, moving substances within the body, producing heat
Triad
a T tubule with 2 terminal cisterns on either side
Fascia
a sheet or band of fibrous connective tissue that is deep to the skin and surrounds muscles and other organs of the body
Ach is terminated by?
acetylcholinesterase enzyme
Motion results from
alternating contraction (shortening) and relaxation of muscles
H zone of sarcomere
are in the centre of A-band, no thin filaments
M line of sarcomere
are in the centre of H zone
sarcomeres are the?
basic functional units of myofibril
During muscle contraction, myosin heads attach to and "walk" along thin filaments at?
both ends of the sarcomere, pulling thin filaments towards the M line
Aponeuroses
broad, flat layer tendon
myofibril consists of thin and flick filaments arranged in?
compartments called sarcomeres
What are the three types of muscle proteins?
contractile, regulatory, structural
tendon
cord of dense regular connective tissue that attaches a muscle to the periosteum of bone
the sarcoplasm is the (blank) of a muscle cell
cytoplasm
Terminal cisterns
dilated end sacs of the SR; against the T tubule
What are the properties of muscle tissue?
electrical excitability, contractility, extensibility, elasticity
Nerve impulses at synaptic end bulbs triggers?
exocytosis of synaptic vesicles
A-band of sarcomere
extends the entire length of thick filaments
T (Transverse) tubules open to the outside of the fibers and filled with?
extracellular fluid
Myofibrils are composed of
filaments, sarcomeres, and proteins
Bonding of ACh to its receptors in sarcolemma opens?
gated ion channels(Na+)
Glycogen is split into?
glucose, then used for ATP synthesis
Skeletal muscle is a separated organ composed of?
hundreds of cell fibers
myofibrils extends the entire?
length of the muscle
NMJ usually located at the?
midpoint of the muscle fiber
the release of acetylcholine stops when?
motor neuron action potentials cease
Although bones provide leverage and form the framework of the body, they cannot
move body parts themselves
blood vessels and nerves penetrate into?
muscle
During embryonic development, each skeletal muscle fiber arises from the fusion of hundreds of small mesodermal cells called
myoblasts
T (Transverse) tubules
nvagination of the sarcolemma that tunnel from the surface toward the center of each muscle fiber
sarcomeres have two thin filaments for every?
one thick filament
Z-discs of sarcomeres
pass through the centre of each I-band
structural proteins keep thick and thin filaments in?
proper alignment
The power stroke is triggered by the?
release of phosphate group
I-bands of sarcomere
rest of thin filaments, no thick filaments
Calcium ion active transport pumps
return calcium ions to the sarcoplasmic reticulum
Endomysium
separates individual muscle fibers from one another
thin filaments slide inward, z discs come together, shortening the sarcomere, then?
shortens the muscle fibers and shortens the entire muscle
What are the three types of muscle tissue?
skeletal, cardiac, smooth
Sarcoplasmic Reticulum (SR) is similar to?
smooth ER in non-muscle cells
cardiac muscle features
striated and involuntary
Skeletal muscle tissue features
striated and voluntary
Forcefulness of contraction depends on?
the length of the sarcomere before contraction begins
inflow of Na+ makes ICF more (+) charged, which changes?
the membrane potential and triggers a muscle action potential
structural proteins contain?
titin, myomesin, nebulin, dystrophin
Skeletal muscle tissue functions
to move bones of the skeleton
sarcomeres are separated by?
z discs
Myofibrils are contractile elements of?
Skeletal muscle
Acetylcholine (ACh)
Acetyl+choline
Potential propagates along the?
Sarcolemma and through the T tubule system
calcium release channels
Sarcoplasmic Reticulum close
Superficial (or SQ layer) connective tissue
Separates muscle from skin, pathway for nerves and vessels for muscles
What is the function of the Sarcoplasmic Reticulum?
Storage of calcium ions in a relaxed muscle fiber and releases calcium from terminal cisterns to trigger muscle contraction