A&P 1: Chapter #10 - Muscle Tissue
Belly of skeletal muscle
(8)
Smooth
Percytes are what kind of muscle cells
Sarcolemma
Plasma membrane of a myocyte cell (S)
Replenishing CP stores Convert lactate into pyruvate Reload O2 into myoglobin
The oxygen debt consists of (3)
length; sarcomeres
The force of a muscle contraction depends on the _____ of the ______________ prior to the contraction
somatic motor neuron; innervates
A motor unit consists of a ___________ ___________ ________ and the muscle fibers it _________
calcium
At the neuromuscular junction, voltage gated channels open resulting to an influx of _____________
10
Between 30-50 ears of age, about ____% of our muscle tissue is replaced by fibrous connective tissue and adipose tissue
40
Between 50-80 year of age another ___% of our muscle is replaced
Sarcoplasm
Cytosol of the myocyte cell (R)
Muscle tone
Even when at rest, a skeletal muscle exhibits a small amount of tension, called this
Somite
From what structures do muscles originate from in the embryo
Hyperplasia
Growth in cell number
Heart
Location of cardiac muscle
Various organs like GI tract
Location of smooth muscle
Dense bodies
Smooth muscle have __________ ________ instead of Z discs
Visceral (single unit) Multiunit
Smooth muscle innervation can be (2)
Unfused tetanus
Tetanus resulting from multiple action potentials at a lower frequency
structural
Thanks to ___________ proteins, there is a transmission of force throughout the entire muscle, resulting in whole muscle contraction
extensibility
The ability of muscle to stretch without being damaged is called
Sarcoplasmic reticulum
The depolarization of the muscle cell via influx of Na+ results in Ca+ being released from ____________ ______________
many
The strength of contraction depends on how ____ motor units are activated
Muscle filament
The structures of the myocyte that perform contraction (T)
Excitation-Contraction coupling
This concept connects the events of a muscle action potential with the sliding filament mechanism
Skeletal
Which of the types of muscle cells are voluntary?
Sarcomere
Z discs move toward each other and ____________ shortens
Myomesin
structural protein of the M line which holds the thick filaments to the center of the sarcomere
Dystrophin
thin filaments attach to z discs by this structural protein; related to muscular dystophy
One nucleas Striated Intercalated discs
Appearance of cardiac muscle
multi-nucleated striated
Appearance of skeletal muscle
One nucleus No striations
Appearance of smooth muscle
Neurotransmitter
Calcium in the synaptic end bulb triggers exocytosis of _________________ into the synaptic cleft
Muscle strength and flexibility decreases Reflexes slow Slow oxidative fiber number increase
Consequences of loss of muscle tissue are
Myosin Actin
Contractile muscle proteins
1. Myosin heads hydrolize ATP and become reoriented and energized 2. Myosin heads bind to actin, forming cross-bridges 3. Myosin cross-bridges rotate toward center of sarcomere (power stroke) 4. As myosin heads bind ATP, the cross-bridges detach from actin
Contraction cycle (4)
A band
Dark, middle part of the sarcomere that extends entire length of thick filaments and includes those parts of thin filaments that overlap thick filaments
Myoblasts
Each myocyte arises from the fusion of 100+ _________________
pump blood
Function of cardiac muscle
produce movement stabilize body positions regulate organ volume move substances within the body produce heat
Function of skeletal muscle
Vasodilation/constriction
Function of smooth muscle
Creatine phosphate Anaerobic cellular respiration (glycolysis) Aerobic cellular respiration
How does the skeletal muscle produce ATP?
Tendon
Identify
Not available
If O2 is ____________, pyruvic acid is converted into lactic acid
available
If oxygen is ___________, pyruvic acid is transported to the mitochondria to be broken down to generate ATP
Concentric Eccentric
Isotonic contraction includes two types
I band
Lighter, less dense area of sarcomere that contains remainder of thin filamnts but no thick filaments. A Z disc passes through the centre of each I band
skeleton
Location of skeletal muscle
Muscle fiber (myocyte)
Long, tubular cells that develop from myoblasts to form muscles (13)
mitosis
Mature skeletal muscle fibers cannot undergo _______
alternately
Motor units contract ___________ to sustain contractions for longer periods of time
tetanus
Muscle contraction resulting from multiple action potentials
1. Inadequate release of Ca+ from SR 2. Depletion of CP, oxygen + nutrients 3. Build up of lactic acid and ADP 4. Insufficient release of ACh at NMJ 5. CNS fatigue
Muscle fatigue occurs due to
Contraction
Muscle tone is due to weak, involuntary _______ of motor units
Myogenesis
Muscles form by ___________ ; which is the process in which myoblasts form into myocyte
thin filaments
Myosin pulls on actin, causing __________ ____________ to slide inward
H zone
Narrow region in center of each A band that contains thick filaments but no thin filaments
Ligand-gated Na+ ; sarcoplasm
Neurotransmitter in the neuromuscular junction binds to _________ channels on the motor end plate which cause an influx of Na into the _________
Size
No matter how strong a contraction, thick and thin filaments of a sarcomere do not change in ________
Satellite cell
Precursor cell to myoblasts
Troponin Tropomyosin
Regulatory muscle proteins
Latent period Contraction period Relaxation period
Twitch contraction periods
Unfused Fused
Types of tetanus
Stronger
Wave summation results in a ___________ contraction
Skeletal Cardiac Smooth
What are the 3 types of muscle cells?
Weakest; stronger
_________ motor units are recruited first followed by _______ motor units
Fascicle
a bundle of skeletal muscle fibers surrounded by perimysium (11)
Duchenne muscular dystrophy
a genetic disoder characterized by progressive muscle degeneration and weakness
Epimysium
a sheath of fibrous elastic connective tissue surrounding an entire muscle (10)
Myofibril
basic rod-like organelle of a muscle cell responsible for contraction (14)
Sarcomere
basic unit of striated muscle tissue
Twitch contraction
brief contraction of all muscle fibers in a motor unit in response to a single action potential
Pericytes
contractile cells that wrap around the endothelial cells of capillaries and venules throughout the body
Myosin
contractile protein of the thick filaments which binds with actin on thin filaments
Actin
contractile protein of thin filaments that binds with myosin on the thick filament
Isotonic contraction
contraction in which tension is constant while muscle length changes
Dermatome
embryonic cells that give rise to inguinal system
Large fiber diameter
fast twitch; pale in color, less blood supply,
Skeletal muscle
form of multinucleated, voluntary, striated muscle functioning in moving bones
Strength training
generates hypertrophy in muscle fibers
Hypertrophy
growth of muscle size; addition of myofilaments to myofibril
Thick filament
larger of the two types of protein filaments that, together form cylindrical structures called myofibrils; occupy the A band, M line, and H zone
Endomysium
layer of areolar connective tisssue that ensheaths each individual myocyte (L)
Stretching
lengthens muscle fibers
Isometric contraction
muscle contracts but does not change length
Muscle striations
muscle tissue featuring a striped pattern from repeating functional units called sarcomeres (Q)
Smooth muscle
muscle which contractions start more slowly and last longer; can shorten and stretch to a greater extent; spindle shaped
Cardiac muscle
muscle which has the same arrangement as skeletal muscle, but also has intercalated discs
Z disc
narrow, plate-shaped regions of dense material that seperate one sarcomere from the next
Wave summation
occurs in muscle when a second action potential triggers muscle contraction before the first has finished
Eccentric contraction
occurs when muscle lengthens while contracted
Concentric contraction
occurs when muscle shortens while in contraction
Motor unit recruitment
process in which the number of active motor units increases
Alpha-actin
protein involved in th
Tropomyosin
protein on thin filament which blocks actin's binding sites during resting
Troponin
protein which moves tropomyosin off of the binding sites of a thin filament when bound to Calcium
Slow oxidative (SO) Fast oxidative
red fiber(s)
M line
region in center of H zone that contains myomesin proteins that hold thick filaments together at the center of the sarcomere
Perimysium
sheath of connetive tissue surrounding a bundle of muscle fibers (9)
Small fiber diameter
slow twitch;
Muscle fatigue
The inability to maintain force of contraction after prolonged activity
Thin filament
smaller of the two types of protein filaments that, together form cylindrical structures called myofibrils;
Sarcoplasmic reticulum
smooth endoplasmic reticulum of muscle cell that stores calcium, regulating blood calcium levels and utilized during contractionf
Titan
structural protein which plays an important role in elasticity of the sarcomere by anchoring the ends of the thick filaments to the Z discs
Fused tetanus
tetanus resulting from multiple action potentials at a higher frequency
Nucleus
the 'brain' of the cell that houses the (P)
Oxygen debt
the amount of oxygen needed to recover after activity
neuromuscular junction
the events at the __________ _____________ produce a muscle action potential
Transverse tubule
tubes of the sarcolemma which allow depolarization of the membrane to quickly penetrate into the interior of the cell
Smooth muscle
which kind of muscle cell has the greatest ability to regenerate?
Fast glycolytic (FG)
white fiber
Slow oxidative Fast oxidative Fast glycolytic
Skeletal muscle fiber types
Motor end plate
Section of the sarcolemma where the neuromuscular junction exist
Titan Nebulin Alpha-actin Myomesin Dystrophin
Structural muscle proteins