Anatomy Chapter 8

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What is the thin filament?

actin

What makes calcium leave its storage area?

action potential traveling down the t-tubules triggering a release

How does exercise change a muscle cell?

causes cell to create more fibers and thus be stronger

What are the t-tubules an extension of?

cell membrane

Where else is calcium involved in muscle movement?

end bulb where it allows synaptic vesicles to bind to cell membrane and release acytlecholine into the cleft

How does calcium get back into the storage area?

enzyme pumps (requires ATP)

What is the difference between a contracted and relaxed sarcomere?

fibers close or far apart, actin connected to myosin or not

Why do muscles look striped?

filaments look stripy

What cartoon step could explain the need for threshold?

h

Which step in your cartoon makes the muscle contract?

l

What is sarcoplasm?

muscle cell cytoplasm

What is treppe?

muscle gets stronger as it first contracts

How does the sliding muscle filament theory explain muscle movement?

muscles move because the filaments slide between each other, shortening the muscle

What is the thick filament?

myosin

Why can't cross-bridges always attach to actin?

need atp to attach and move the tropomyosin so arms can attach to myosin binding sites

Why do you need ATP for both contracting and relaxing?

need it to let myosin hands grab onto the muscle, also need to pump calcium back into the terminal cisterns so the stimulus stops

What is a sarcomere?

one bundle of actin and myosin

Why can muscles only pull, not push?

relaxed state is as far apart as the thick and thin filaments can get, they can only pull or get closer can only shorten

What are terminal cisterns an extension of?

sarcoplasmic reticulum

How big are muscle cells?

skinny and long

Why is there so little room for sarcoplasm in muscle cells?

so full of actin-myosin bundles

What is the all-or-nothing principle?

stimulus is either big enough for an action potential or not. there is only one sized action potential

Where is calcium stored in a muscle cell?

terminal cisterns

What happens when calcium is put back into the storage area?

the muscle relaxes because binding sites no longer exposed to myosin sidearms

How can the cross bridges provide enough force to shorten a muscle cell?

with the help of ATP


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