Muscle Tissue: Electrical excitability
Contractile proteins
- A thick filament and a myosin molecule - A string of actin molecules (Looks like strand of pearls) - During contraction, myosin heads connect with myosin binding sites on actin
The sarcomere structure
- An arrangement of thick and thin filaments in distinctive zones - A bands and I bands of a sarcomere give skeletal muscle fibers their striated (striped) appearance
Muscle proteins (sarcomeres are built from three groups of proteins)
- Contractile proteins (generate force during contraction) - Regulatory proteins (help switch the contraction process on and off) - Structural proteins (hold thick and thin filaments together; link myofibrils to sarcolemma)
Sarcomere
- Small compartment of a myofibril; functional units of muscle - Contain the thick filaments and thin filaments of contractile proteins
Parts of a sarcomere
- Z disc - A band (dark) - I band (light) - H zone - M line
know locations of
- motor end plate - synaptic terminal - synaptic cleft (space) - somatic motor neuron
What does it mean for a cell to be electrically excitable?
-A cell responds to an electrical stimulus -Changing electrical charge at the plasma membrane
Botulinum toxin (botox)
-Blocks exocytosis at synaptic bulb/terminal -Highly toxic; has medicinal uses
sub cellular structures to convert electrical excitation to contraction
1.Transverse tubules 2.Sarcoplasmic reticulum
Myofibrils
= Highly organized bundles of protein filaments -Several myofibrils are contained in a single muscle fiber
Transverse tubules
= Invaginations of the sarcolemma -Allow for electrical signal to quickly reach entire muscle fiber
Myasthenia Gravis
= Muscle weakness disease; autoimmune -Antibodies attack one's own ACh receptors
Curare
= Plant based poison blocks ACh receptors at motor end plate -Used by South American Indians in blowgun darts
Sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR)
= system of membranous sacs around each myofibril -When action potential reaches the SR, Ca2+ is released from SR
Motor unit
A somatic motor neuron and all the muscle fibers it innervates (controls).
EMG
Electromyography: Recording of the electrical activity of a muscle
Myosin
Major component of the thick filament
Actin
Major component of the thin filament
Neurotransmitter
a chemical released by a neuron to excite target cell
muscle action potential
an electrical signal that initiates muscle contraction
Regulatory muscle proteins (controlled by calcium ions)
bind to and change the shape of the regulatory proteins -> uncovers the myosin binding sites on actin
Acetylcholine (ACh)
initiates muscle contraction - this causes a muscle action potential
electrical change (action potential)
is a signal, It has to reach the myofibrils inside the cell and be converted to a chemical signal for muscle contraction.
During contraction
myosin slides actin toward M line to bring the Z discs together (shorten the sarcomere)
Synapse
region of communication between neuron and target cell
Motor end plate
sarcolemma at NMJ
The nervous system must
send a signal for the muscle fiber to contract, the signal gets converted to electrical change in the muscle fiber by having ions move in and out
Structural proteins contribute to
the alignment, stability, elasticity, and extensibility of myofibrils
Titin is
the third most plentiful protein in muscle (after actin and myosin). It connects the Z disc to the M line and accounts for much of the elasticity of myofibrils
Skeletal muscles are
voluntarily controlled
Neuromuscular junction (NMJ)
where the neuron and muscle fiber meet