AP Chapter 10 - Muscles
Skeletal muscle fiber has only __ NMJ near its midpoint
1
1. nerve impulse arrival stimulate synaptic vesicles ___cytosis to fuse with motor neuron plasma membrane releasing _____ into synaptic cleft 2.____ binds to _________ end plate, opens __+ channel so it can flow across membrane 3. Inflow of __+ increases muscle fiber charge triggering muscle ___________ potential 4. ___ rapidly broken down by ______
1. exocytosis, Ach 2. Ach, motor, Na+ 3. Na+, action 4. Ach, AchE
__ band = darker, middle part of sarcomere
A band
excess ____ is used to synthesize creatine phosphate
ATP
Contraction cycle: 1. _____ hydrolysis - Muscle energized 2. Myosin ___________ Actin - releases hydrolyzed phosphate - forms cross __________ 3. _________ ____________ - myosin head pivots pulling thin filaments past thick towards sarcomere center generating tension ( 4. Myosin ___________ from Actin
ATP Attaches cross bridge Power Stroke detaches
Sarcoplasm includes more glycogen for ____ synthesis; also ______________ to bind O2 from interstitial fluid so can be released by mitochondria fro ____ production
ATP Myoglobin ATP
muscle fiber speed (slow of fast) is dependent on how fast _______ in myosin heads can hydrolyze ATP
ATPase
__________________ neurotransmitter responsible for all skeletal muscle contraction, stored in synaptic terminal, when the nerve impulse arrives vesicles with it pop to outside to release it into synaptic cleft, binds to receptors
Acetylcholine
Main component of thin filaments =
Actin
___ catalyzes phosphate from creatine back to ADP to generate ATP
CK
aA lot of _____ is stored in Sarcoplasmic Reticulum
Ca2+
____________ - dense sheet that lines body walls / limbs and supports - surrounds muscles ?/ organs
Fascia
__________ - muscle fiber bundles
Fascicles
Muscle enlargement due to hypertrophy is from these skeletal muscle fibers
Fast Glycolytic
__ zone = center of A bands, narrow, thick filaments only
H
___________ contraction - tension without muscle length change
Isometric
__ discs separate 1 sarcomere from the next
Z discs
Main component of thick filaments with motor protein function that converts ATP to motion =
Myosin
_________ heads move along thin filaments at both sarcomere ends __________ thin filaments toward M line --> mov inward to meet @ center sarcomere
Myosin pulling
___mysium - surrounds fascicles
Perimysium
1. Ach ______________ 2. Ach receptor __________ 3. Muscle _________ __________ triggered 4. Ach activity _____________
Released Activated Action Potential Terminated
Fluid filled sacs that encircle each myofibril =
Sarcoplasmic Reticulum
_____________ Muscle Functions: movement, posture, guard ECPs, Body Temp, store nutrients,
Skeletal
Thin filaments of myofibrils =
actin
Four special properties of Muscle: 1. generate _____________ potentials 2. __________ forcefully 3. _________ within limits without damage 4. ________ return to original shape after contraction
action potentials contract stretch return
Structural myofibrils keep thick / thin filaments ____________ ; link myofibrils to _____________ and ECM
aligned sarcolemma
Aerobic respiration is slower than _____________ glycolysis, but AR has higher ____ yield
anaerobic ATP
Connective tissue that extends as broad, flat sheet =
aponeurosis
Muscle action potentials can be ______rhythmic or _____________: NT, Hormones, pH
auto-rhythmic Chemical
Ca2+ enters sarcoplasm from SR and interstitial fluid of _________ muscle
cardiac
__________ muscle - striated, involuntary
cardiac
Feeling of tiredness / desire to cease activity prior to muscle fatigue is caused by changes in CNS and called _________ fatigue
central
At rest Terminal Cisterns are blocked by T tubule ___________
clusters
Isotonic muscle contractions are _____________ and ___________
concentric and eccentric
3 kinds of myofibril proteins
contractile, regulatory, structural
During this phase of muscle contraction Ca2+ binds to troponin, myosin binding sites on actin exposed, cross bridges form, and peak tension reached =
contraction
Regulatory myofibrils turn _______________ on / off
contraction
When muscle fibers contract the Ca2+ released from the terminal cisterns trigger muscle ____________
contraction
3 ways muscle makes ATP =
creatine phosphate anaerobic glycolysis aerobic respiration
Stretched muscles have decreased overlap and ____________ ability to contract
decreased
___________ hold cardiac muscle together
desmosomes
Thick and thin filaments ______ extend entire length of muscle fiber
don't
Botox blocks _________ of synaptic vesicles at NMJ
exocytosis
this muscle fiber is white, has large amounts of glycogen, generates ATP form glycolysis, strong / quick contraction, fast twitch, intense anaerobic movements of short duration and fatigue fast ; weight lifting
fast glycolytic
This muscle fiber is dry red, generates ATP from AR & anaerobic glycolysis, moderate to high fatigue resistance, high intracellular glycogen, fast contraction; walking / sprinting =
fast oxidative
Depletion of CP causes _____________
fatigue
Contractile myofibrils generate ________
force
number of impulses per second = __________ of stimulation
frequency
Sustained contraction, can't detect individual twitches with no relaxation = ___________ ________________
fused tetanus
____ junctions allow action potentials to spread in cardiac muscle
gap
When creatine phosphate supply depleted _______ catabolized to make ATP
glucose
__________ = glucose molecule breaks down into 2 pyretic acid molecules in cytosol producing net gain of 2 ATP, and doesn't require O2
glycolysis
Total number of skeletal muscle fibers does not __________ with exercise, but characteristics can change
increase
Cardiac muscle has ____________ discs
intercalated
T-Tubules are filled with ____________ fluid so ___________ potentials travel along sarcolemma quickly spreading to excite all parts of _________ fiber at same time
interstitial action muscle
During heavy exercise where O2 is lacking, pyruvic acid is converted to ______ acid in process called anaerobic __________
lactic glycolysis
O2 used to restore metabolic condition to resting levels in 3 ways 1. convert ________ acid back to ________ stored in liver 2. replenish CP + ATP in _____________ 3. replace ____ removed from myoglobin
lactic, glycogen muscle O2
large motor units = __________ movements
large
during this phase of muscle contraction action potential sweeps over sarcolemma causing Ca2+ release form SR =
latent
resting --> ____________ --> contraction --> _______________ --> ______________
latent relaxation refractory
Cardiac muscle has a ___________ refractory time
long
Relaxed muscle = ______ Ca2+
low
Subcutaneous layer also known as hypodermis separates ________ from skin
muscle
thermogenesis is a function of ___________
muscle
The use of creatine phosphate is unique to __________
muscles
____________ give skeletal muscle striped look
myofibril
contractile organelle of skeletal muscle =
myofibril
Thick filaments of myofibrils =
myosin
___________________. _______________ = synapse between somatic motor neuron and skeletal muscle fibers
neuromuscular junction
Chemical messenger =
neurotransmitter
End of A band is the _______ zone, where thick and thin filaments are side by side
overlap
small motor units = __________ movements
precise
total force depends on ________ of impulses arriving at NMJ
rate
Muscle fibers with high myoglobin are the color __________ equivalent of ________ meat
red dark
During this phase of muscle contraction Ca2+ actively transported back into SR, myosin binding sites covered by tropomyosin, myosin heads detach from actin, and tension decreases =
relaxation
muscle fibers when ___________ produce > ATP than needed
relaxed
Increased muscle tone without tendon reflexes =
rigidity
motor unit recruitment are not stimulated to contract at _____ time; the ___________ motor units are recruited first; this is why contraction is smooth and not jerky
same weakest
______________ = muscle cell plasma membrane
sarcolemma
Filaments are arranged in compartments called
sarcomeres
_______________ = muscle fiber cytoplasm
sarcoplasm
Skeletal muscle has a ___________ refractory time
short
if tension generated by muscle is > resistance of object a muscle will be ______________ and movement occurs
shortened
Action potential are always the same ________
size
total strength of contraction depends on _____ of motor units and ___________ activated at given time
size number
____________ muscle - striated / voluntary
skeletal
Skeletal muscle shortens during contraction, thick / thin filaments _______ past each other
slide
this muscle fiber is dark red, generates ATP from AR, slow contraction speed, fatigue resistant; associated with posture / endurance =
slow oxidative
3 types of skeletal muscle fibers are
slow oxidative, fast oxidative, fast glycolytic
_______ muscle can stretch considerably and still maintain contraction function
smooth
__________ muscle - not striated, involuntary
smooth
__________ muscle contracts in twisting pattern and relaxes in opposite
smooth
____________ muscle has the greatest amount of stretching
smooth
Neurons that stimulate skeletal muscle to contract are __________ motor neurons
somatic
Increased muscle tone with increased tendon reflexes =
spasm
Increase in Ca2+ concentration in sarcoplasm _____________ contraction
starts
Decrease in Ca2+ concentration in sarcoplasm _____________ contraction
stops
When muscle fibers are relaxed the SR ________ Ca2+
stores
A 2nd stimulus after refractory period of 1st but before skeletal muscle fiber relaxed will cause the 2nd contraction to be ________ than the 1st; this is called _________ ______________
stronger wave summation
Dilated ends sac on sarcoplasmic reticulum =
terminal cisterns
A bands extend the entire length of _______ filaments
thick
I band contains only _____ filaments
thin
to sustain muscle _________ motor units alternate on / off
tone
Terminal cisterns butt against T-tubules on both sides to form a _______
triad
Adipose of subcutaneous layer stored most of body _______________
triglycerides
When a muscle is relaxed myosin is blocked from binding to actin by ________________ the covers the myosin binding sites on actin
tropomyosin
When Ca2+ binds ___________ it causes shape change which moves tropomyosin so contraction can begin
troponin
tropomyosin is held in place by
troponin
2 regulatory proteins that are part of thin filaments are
troponin tropmyosin
VGC-Na+ channels are located on T ____________ ; main role is to trigger opening of Ca2+ release channels in ______________ ____________ of SR,
tubules terminal cisterns
_________ contraction = brief contraction
twitch
Sustained but wavering contraction with partial relaxation = __________ ___________________
unfused tetanus
The force of muscle contractions _________
varies
Muscle fibers with low myoglobin are the color __________ equivalent of ________ meat
white white
___________ contraction = muscle shortens and pulls on structure to produce movement
Concentric
ATP formation from CP occurs rapidly, therefore, it is the ____ source of energy when muscle contraction begins
1st
If 2 stimuli applied, 1 after another, muscle respond to only _____
1st
Ration of thin : thick filaments
2:1
_______ are stored 1st in liver then muscle as glycogen
Carbs
___________ contraction - causes more muscle damage
Eccentric
___________ contraction - muscle lengthens, tension exerted by myosin cross-bridges to resist movement load slowing lengthening
Eccentric
______mysium - surrounds muscle fiber cells; contains muscle stem cells; mostly reticular fibers
Endomysium
____mysium - separates muscle from surrounding tissues
Epimysium
Z discs pass through center of __ band
I
__ Band is lighter and less dense
I
__ zone = middle sarcomere, holds thick filaments together in center of H zone
M
__________________ of muscle is in rows near contractile muscle proteins so ATP can be produced fast
Mitochondria