Smooth muscle physiology Flashcards

1
Q

Characteristics of smooth muscle

A
  1. No striations
  2. No myofibrils, no sarcomeres
  3. Contains actin and myosin
  4. Spindle-shaped body
  5. 1/10 of the size of skeletal muscle
  6. Dense bodies
  7. Involuntary control of the Autonomic Nervous System
  8. Uninucleated
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2
Q

What are dense bodies?

A

Anchoring sites for actin filaments similar to the function of Z disks in striated muscle

Dense bodies are anchored to the sarcolemma by attachment plagues

Allows for the attachment of intermediate filaments which form an overall net-like structure on the muscle cell

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3
Q

What is the orientation of the thick and thin filaments?

A

These are dispersed throughout the sarcoplasm of the cell with the thin filaments made up of F-actin and tropomyosin are anchored by dense bodes and in between each thin filament is the short thick filaments

When contractions take place the cell actually twists or contorts

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4
Q

Where is smooth muscle located

STOVE

A

S → Skin (arrector pili muscles that cause hairs to raise)

T → Tracts of the reproductive, respiratory (around bronchi), and urinary system

O → hollow organs (intestines, bladder, uterus, stomach

V → vessels (blood vessels constriction)

E → eyes (iris contraction/dilation, and lens movement)

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5
Q

Smooth muscle contractions in terms of dense bodies and filaments

A

As the myosin filament heads slide the actin filaments forward they also pull on the dense bodies, which pulls on the network of intermediate filaments running throughout the cell causing it to shorten/ squeeze.

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6
Q

What are the two subtypes of smooth muscle?

A
  1. Single unit
  2. Multiunit
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7
Q

What is a single unit smooth muscle?

A

This is when only one or two nerves are required to activate an entire sheet of smooth muscle as the gap junctions that the cells use to communicate allow for the transmission of the action potential rapidly so the entire sheet acts together.

eg. a single plug powers an entire string of Christmas lights

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8
Q

Where is single unit smooth muscle found

A

Found in hollow organs

Intestinal organs

blood vessels

respiratory tract

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9
Q

What is a multi-unit smooth muscle?

A

Contain fewer to no gap junctions between these cells so it requires multiple nerve fibers to transmit signals for the smooth muscle cells to contract.

Recruitment of muscle fibers do occur because each fiber acts individually

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10
Q

Where are multi-unit smooth muscle found?

A

Large airways

Arteries

Eye (ciliary muscle, iris)

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11
Q

What does it mean that single-unit smooth muscles are pacemakers?

A

Similar to cardiac cells in the SA and AV node some smooth muscle cells have a myogenic activity which means they can contract on their own without stimulation from the autonomic nervous system through spontaneous depolarizations.

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12
Q

Are multi-unit muscle cells self excitable?

A

No

They rely on a neuron to excite them similar to skeletal muscle cells

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13
Q

What are varicosities?

A

These are bulbs at the end of the axon terminal which contains various neurotransmitters

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14
Q

What kind of control is multi-unit for?

A

Fine control as the muscles act separately

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15
Q

What kind of control is single-unit smooth muscle?

A

Gross control as these cells spread the signal so they can work together or a mass scale

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16
Q

General steps for Smooth muscle excitation-contraction

A
  1. Ca2+ comes into the muscle cell gradually increases in membrane potential so it is more positive
  2. Voltage-gates Ca2+ channels in the plasma membrane will open causing a flood of positive charge
  3. Ca2+ triggers the release of Ca2+ from the SR
  4. Ca2+ binds to calmodulin
  5. Ca2+ - calmodulin activates myosin light-chain kinase (MLCK)
  6. Myosin ATPase is activated via phosphorylation
  7. Crossbridge cycling
  8. Contraction
17
Q

How are slow-wave potentials formed?

A

As Ca 2+ leaks into the cell the membrane potential increases

If the [Ca2+] is not high enough to reach the threshold potential the potential will go down due to K+ channels releasing cations causing the membrane potential to become more negative.

18
Q

How does a Smooth muscle contract

A

Ca2+ can leak into the cell through leaky Ca2+ which can gradually make the membrane potential high enough to reach threshold potential

Once threshold potential is reached this will cause voltage gated Ca2+ channels to open which will causing a flood of Ca2+ to enter the cell

The release of Ca2+ from the SR is then stimulated

The Ca2+ will then bind to calmodulin activating it

Ca2+ - calmodulin complex will then activate myosin light chain kinase

MLCK will then phosphorylate the myosin light chain causing Myosin ATPase to be active.

The myosin ATPase will then hydrolyze the ATP into ADP and Pi resulting in an active cocked back myosin

Myosin will then bind to the actin filamernt myosin binding sites and

19
Q

How is the crossbridge cycle regulated?

A
  1. No troponin, tropomyosin, and actin complex
  2. Tropomyosin and calponin bind to the thin filament to prevent the binding of the myosin before needed
  3. Caldesmen is on the myosin
  4. Calponin and caldesmon inhibit the ATPase activity of the myosin head so it cannot hydrolyze ATP into ADP and Pi initiating cross bridge
  5. Ca2+/ Calmodulin when formed inhibits the calponin and caldesmon from inhibiting the ATPase activity and hinder the myosin and actin-binding
  6. Ca2+/ Calmodulin will activate MLCK to add a phosphate to the neck of the myosin on the regulatory light chain to stimulate the myosin ATPase activity
  7. Hydrolyzes ATP so that the myosin cocks back and attaches to a myosin head
20
Q

Why does it take so long for the smooth fibers to contract?

A

10-100x slower than skeletal muscle

Each of the myosin necks needs to be phosphorylated in order for the ATPase activity to be active.

21
Q

How does the smooth muscle relax?

A
  • Myosin Light Chain Phosphatase removes the phosphate groups from each of the myosin necks
  • Na+ -Ca2+ counter-transporters will remove the Ca2+ from the sarcoplasm into the SR
  • As the [Ca2+] goes down this will cause Calmodulin to become inactive so it can no longer inhibit Calponin and caldesmon.
  • Calponin and caldesmon will then go back to complexing with actin and tropomyosin blocking myosin from binding to actin and inhibiting ATPase activity.
22
Q

How does the smooth muscle relax?

A
  • Myosin Light Chain Phosphatase removes the phosphate groups from each of the myosin necks
  • Na+ -Ca2+ counter-transporters will remove the Ca2+ from the sarcoplasm into the SR
  • As the [Ca2+] goes down this will cause Calmodulin to become inactive so it can no longer inhibit Calponin and caldesmon.
  • Calponin and caldesmon will then go back to complexing with actin and tropomyosin blocking myosin from binding to actin and inhibiting ATPase activity.
23
Q

Describe the neural regulation of the smooth muscle?

A

Smooth muscle is involuntary so it is under the control of the Autonomic Nervous System (Sympathetic and/or Parasympathetic)

Neural regulation can either be inhibitory or excitatory to the muscle, depends on the receptor type and neurotransmitters

The reaction is dependent on where the muscle is located