Ch. 9
sarcomere
A contracting unit of muscles;extends from Z line to Z line
myofibrils
A fibril collectively arranged in longitudinal bundles in muscle cells (fibers); composed of thin filaments of actin and a regulatory protein and thick filaments of myosin.
troponin
A globular protein that associated with tropomyosin as part of the thin filament of the sarcomere. Troponin binds Ca2+, which causes the conformation change in tropomyosin required to expose the myosin-binding sites on actin and initiate muscle contraction.
tropomyosin
A helical protein that winds around actin helices in skeletal and cardiac muscle cells to form the thin filament of the sarcomere. In the absence of Ca2+, tropomyosin covers the myosin-binding sites on actin and prevents muscle contraction. When calcium is present, a conformation change in tropomyosin occurs so that the myosin-binding sites are exposed and muscle contraction can occur.
isometric contraction
A muscle contraction in which no movement occurs because of an equal force in the opposite direction; the length of the muscle remains constant under tension
what happens if acetylcholinesterase is dysfunctional
A skeletal muscle membrane maintained in a depolarized state cannot generate action potentials because the voltage-gated Na channels in the membrane become inactivated, which requires repolarization to reverse
acetylcholinesterase
An enzyme that breaks down the neurotransmitter acetylcholine; excess amount of it will cause the muscle not to contract because sufficient acetylcholine cannot reach the muscle
slow oxidative fibers
Are slow to contract, slow to fatigue; they contain myosin with low ATPase activity and many mitochondria which allow for high endurance exercises; are dark red colored muscle
unfused tetanus
At low stimulation frequencies, the tension may oscillate as the muscle fiber partially relaxes between stimuli
fast glycolytic fibers
Important for short-term intense, powerful movements. Prefer anaerobic glycolysis; white muscle color
fast oxidative glycolytic fibers
Intermediate fibers, large, fast acting, myoglobin and glycogen, rely on oxidative and glycolytic pathways, fatigue resistant, mostly in sprinters. few mitochondria
motor end plate
Muscle fiber part of the NMJ that is a region of the muscle cell membrane opposite the synaptic end bulbs; contains acetylcholine receptors
sarcoplasmic reticulum
Organelle of the muscle fiber that stores calcium in the terminal cisternae
H-zone
The region at the center of an A band of a sarcomere that is made up of myosin only. The H zone gets shorter (and may disappear) during muscle contraction.
A-band
The region of the sarcomere where myosin filaments are predominantly seen with minor overlap of the actin filaments; creates the dark color
isotonic contraction
a contraction in which the muscle changes lengths but the load is constant
tetanus
a maintained contraction in response to repetitive stimulation
motor unit
a motor neuron and all the muscle fibers it innervates
M-line
a protein in the middle of the H-zone that connects the other ends of myosin to each other.
neural control of muscle tension
affected by: frequency of action potentials in individual motor units or by recruitment of motor units
tension-frequency relationship
as action potential frequency increases, the level of tension increases by summation
calcium-atpase
atp required to pump calcium back into the cell from the cytosol back into the SR; calcium level is still elevated after the action potential because it takes longer to pump calcium back into the SR
I-band
contains only thin actin filaments that do not overlap thick filaments; is separated into Two Halves by a Z-line
troponin and calcium
in the presence of calcium, troponin will bind to calcium and reveal the binding site to myosin thus allowing cross-bridges
passive tension
increasing muscle length past optimal length will increase the passive tension of a muscle fiber due to the elongation of the tintin protein that is attached to the myosin
twitch
mechanical response of a muscle fiber to a single action potential
motor unit recruitment
motor units are recruited from smallest to largest
tintin
protein that attaches the myosin to the z-line
tetanic summation vs. twitches
tetanic summation tension is greater than twitch tension because with the frequent action potentials being transmitted, calcium concentration in the cytosol remain elevated and allow for more binding sites for myosin to bind and thus produce more cross bridges
A-band during contraction
the A-band remains unchanged because the length of the myosin does not change
H-zone during contraction
the H-zone is reduced because the myosin and actin slide past each other and overlap
I-band during contraction
the I-band reduces because the area of actin that does not contain myosin is reduced as the myosin slides towards the z-line
muscle contraction
the activation of force generating sites in the muscle fibers; does not necessarily mean that the muscle shortens
twitch duration factors
the duration of a twitch depends on calcium ATPase activity and how long it takes for the fibers to complete their cross-bridges
Z-line
the end limits of a single sarcomere; it is where the myosin and actin attach to in the sarcomere
creatine phosphate
the metabolic pathway used by fast twitch fibers; provides energy for short bursts by phosphorylating ADP
motor unit strength
the more fibers in a single motor unit the more force can be produced; the less fibers innervated by a motor unit the more finely controlled the movement will be
power stroke
the movement of the cross bridge once the adp and pi of the energized myosin head detaches
antagonist muscle
the muscle that opposes the original action of the agonist muscle
acetylcholine
the only neurotransmitter used to active muscle fibers; opens ion channels on the muscle fibers once it binds to its receptors which will then cause action potentials and ultimately muscle contraction
Muscle
the organ responsible for contraction and movement of the body; made up of many muscle fibers
muscle fibers
the same as muscle cells; many of them make up a muscle
sarcomere length during contraction
the sarcomere shortens during a contraction
active tension
the tension increases as you increase the length until you get to optimal length; past optimal length, tension will decrease
latent period
the time between stimulation and the onset of contraction
contraction time
the time from the end of the latent period until the peak tension is generated
sliding filament mechanism
thick and thin filaments do not shorten their lengths but instead slide past each other to generate force
mysoin
thick filaments in the sarcomere; they contain globular heads with binding sites to actin and ATP that are crucial for the cross bridge cycle
actin
thin filaments that is found in the sarcomere; made up of troponin and tropomyosin
tropomyosin inhibition
tropomyosin blocks the myosin binding site on the actin filament until calcium binds to troponin and changes the tropomyosin's conformation
Transvers Tubules
tubular system that interact with the terminal cisternae in producing action potentials; they are continuous to the plasma membrane and allow potentials to travel deep into the muscle fiber from the plasma membrane
fused tetanus
when stimulus frequency is so high that no muscle relaxation takes place between stimuli