Muscles Flashcards

1
Q

What are the properties of muscle cells (4)

A
  1. extensible
  2. contractile
  3. excitable
  4. elastic
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2
Q

What are functions of skeletal muscles (5)

A
  • maintain posture
  • maintain stability and structure of joints
  • move substances through the digestive tract
  • generate heat to maintain internal body temperature
  • locomotion
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3
Q

What are motor units

A

the motor nerve and the muscle fibres it innervates

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4
Q

What are motor units

A

the motor nerve and the muscle fibres it innervates

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5
Q

What is the difference between a smaller motor unit and a large motor unit

A

Small - motor neurone innervates few muscle fibres
- allow for finer and more precise control of movement and produces a smaller force

Large - motor neurone innervates thousands of muscle fibres
- produce a much larger force

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6
Q

What is a motor pool

A

all the motor units which work together to innervate a single muscle

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7
Q

How is a transverse-tubule (T-tubule) formed?

A

sarcolemma extends deep into centre of muscle fibres

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8
Q

What is titin and what’s its function?

A
  • extends from z-line to m-line
  • attaches to myosin filament -> keeps myosin centered
  • allows for muscle to have its passive elasticity
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9
Q

What is nebulin and what is its function

A
  • extends from z-line and acts as a scaffold for actin filaments
  • determines the length of actin filaments in sarcomeres
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10
Q

What is excitation-contraction coupling?

A

conversion of an electrical stimulus into a mechanical response

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11
Q

what occurs after depolarisation of motor-endplate

A
  • Local depolarisation of motor end plate initiates an action potential
    • travels along sarcolemma and down the t-tubule
  • this causes conformational change in VG Ca2+ channels
    • open up
  • Ca2+ releasing channels also open up and stored Ca2+ moves out from SR into the sarcoplasm
  • cytoplasmic [Ca2+] increases
  • initiates a sequence which leads to muscle contraction (cross-bridge cycle)
  • once nerve stimulation stops, muscles relax
  • Ca2+ is pumped back into the SR by the SERCA
    • ATP is needed for energy
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12
Q

What are the stages in the cross-bridge cycle?

A
  • Ca2+ binds to troponin to cause a conformational shape change
    • tropomyosin moves away from actin binding site (binding site is exposed)
      1. ATP binds to myosin head
        1. breaks the link between actin and myosin
      2. ATP is hydrolysed by ATPase → ADP + Pi
        1. ADP + Pi remain attached to myosin
        2. myosin head aligns with the new actin binding site that is further along the actin filament
      3. Pi dissociates from myosin
        1. allows myosin head to bind to binding site on actin with a higher affinity
        2. myosin head attaches to binding site on actin filament
        3. ADP still attached to myosin head
      4. Powerstroke occurs
        1. myosin neck rotates myosin head which causes myosin to pull on actin filament towards the center of the sarcomere
        2. muscle shortens and a force in generated in the muscle
      5. ADP dissociates from myosin
        1. myosin is still attached to actin in a rigid state
        2. myosin awaits another ATP molecule to break the link between actin and myosin so that another cross-bridge cycle can begin
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13
Q

what is a muscle twitch

A

one complete cycle of muscle fibre contraction and relaxation in response to a single action potential

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14
Q

What generates force of muscle contraction?

A

cycle of cross-bridge formation and breaking

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15
Q

Why is muscle contraction so smooth?

A

cross-bridges form independently to one another

- at any one time, some cross-bridges are bound while others are not

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16
Q

What is muscle recruitment

A

process where the motor units in a muscle are gradually being activated

17
Q

what factor is motor units fired based on

A

size of motor units

18
Q

how does the twitch force increase

A
  • increase in frequency of action potential

- increase in the number of motor units recruited

19
Q

What is tetanus

A

tetanus - state of sustained maximal muscle contraction

20
Q

what is the latent period and what happens during this period?

A
  • time before the muscle fibres generate a tension

- formation of cross-bridges occur in this period + influx of calcium ions into sarcoplasm -> bind to troponin

21
Q

What is the contraction period

A

time from when muscle first generates tension -> the peak tension generated

22
Q

What is the relaxation period

A

time in which tension decreases back to 0

  • calcium ions unbind from troponin and cross-bridges detach
  • calcium ions are taken back up into the sarcoplasmic reticulum
23
Q

in concentric contraction, what happens as the load increases? (5)

A
  • latent period increases
  • sarcomere shortening distance decreases
  • shortening velocity decreases
  • total twitch duration decreases
  • relaxation period decreases
24
Q

What are the 5 reasons for muscle fatigue?

A
  • inhibition of cross-bridge cycling
  • lactic acid build-up
  • conduction pathway failure
  • depletion of energy sources
  • central command fatigue
25
Q

What happens after ACh binds to the recceptors

A
  • ACh is broken down by acetylcholinesterase -> Acetate + choline
  • choline is taken back into the nerve terminal through the choline carrier
  • choline acetyltransferase catalyses the reaction to synthesise more ACh (choline + acetyl coA -> ACh + coA)
26
Q

How is the neuromuscular junction maintained?

A
  • muscle cells synthesize ACh receptors, LPR4 and MuSK which cluster at the centre of the cell
  • LRP4 and MuSK form a complex
  • at the presynaptic nerve terminal, ACh and agrin are synthesised
  • agrin binds to the LPR4 and MuSK complex -> trigger a series of intracellular events
  • Rapsyn is formed which stabilises the ACh receptor!