Chapter 10 Flashcards

1
Q

The cytoplasm of muscle cells which contains cytosol and all organelles of a muscle cell is called the _______.

A

Sarcoplasm

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2
Q

The plasma membrane of a muscle cell is called the ________.

A

Sarcolemma

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3
Q

Cylindrical organelles that make up 50-80% of muscle cell volume and are bundles of specialized proteins used for muscle contraction are called _______.

A

Myofibrils

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4
Q

The modified endoplasmic reticulum in muscle cells which surround each myofibril and store calcium is called the _______.

A

Sarcoplasmic Reticulum

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5
Q

The structure that extends inward from the Sarcolemma, surrounds each myofibril, and forms a tunnel-like network within the muscle fiber is called the ________.

A

Transverse Tubules

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6
Q

The combination of a Transverse Tubule and two terminal cisternae is called a ______.

A

Triad

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7
Q

The hundreds of thousands of protein bundles that compose a myofibril are called ______.

A

Myofilaments

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8
Q

The three types of myofilaments are ______.

A

Thick Filaments, Thin Filaments, and Elastic Filaments

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9
Q

Each thick filament contains many contractile proteins called _________.

A

Myosin

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10
Q

The contractile and regulatory proteins contained within thin filaments are called _______.

A

Actin (contractile), Tropomyosin (regulatory), and Troponin (regulatory)

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11
Q

The two regulatory proteins found in thin filaments that help control muscle contraction are _______.

A

Tropomyosin and Troponin

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12
Q

Elastic filaments are composed of a coiled structural protein, which stretches and recoils to provide elasticity to muscle fibers, called ______.

A

Titin

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13
Q

The light region of muscle striation, which contains only thin filaments, is called the _____.

A

I-Band

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14
Q

The dark region of muscle striation, which contains thick filaments, is called the ______.

A

A-Band

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15
Q

The functional unit of contraction, where muscle tension is produced, from Z-Disk to Z-Disk in a myofibril is called a _______.

A

Sarcomere

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16
Q

The interaction of thin and thick filaments during muscles contraction and relaxation is known as the _______.

A

Sliding-Filament Theory

17
Q

The only band that remains unchanged in size during muscle contraction is the ______.

A

A-Band

18
Q

The synapse of a motor neuron with a muscle fiber is called the ________.

A

Neuromuscular Junction

19
Q

The neurotransmitter in the axon terminals of motor neurons that connect to skeletal muscle fibers is ______.

A

Acetylcholine

20
Q

Describe the process of muscle contraction.

A

(1) Excitation Phase: First, the Sarcolemma must be stimulated by Acetylcholine released from a motor neuron. This causes an action potential.
(2) Excitation-Contraction Coupling: Once the muscle fiber is excited, this is conveyed to myofilaments.
(3) Contraction Phase: Then the sliding-filament mechanism occurs and the sarcomere contracts. Contraction in many sarcomeres produce contraction of the whole muscle.

21
Q

What are the steps of Excitation Phase?

A
  1. Action potential arrives at motor neuron axon terminal via ACh contained in synaptic vesicles. Ca+ channels in the axon terminal are triggered to open.
  2. Ca+ is released into the axon terminal, which triggers exocytosis of the synaptic vesicles containing ACh.
  3. Synaptic vesicles release ACh into the synaptic cleft (between neuron and motor end plate of sarcolemma).
  4. ACh binds to ligand-gated ion channels of motor end plate to trigger release of Na+.
  5. The ion channels open and release Na+ into muscle fiber.
  6. Entry of Na+ into the muscle fiber depolarizes the sarcolemma and causes end-plate potential.
22
Q

What are the steps of Excitation-Contraction Coupling?

A
  1. End-plate potential left behind from Excitation Phase spreads down the sarcolemma and this stimulates an action potential within the muscle fiber.
  2. The action potential continues like a wave into the Transverse Tubules and triggers more Na+ release into the muscle fiber.
  3. The depolarization within the Transverse Tubules causes Ca+ channels to open in the sarcoplasmic reticulum, releasing Ca+ from the SR into the cytosol of the muscle fiber.
23
Q

What are the steps of Contraction Phase?

A
  1. Ca+ that was left in the cytosol of the muscle fiber after Excitation-Contraction Coupling now binds to Troponin, the regulatory protein of the thin filament Actin.
  2. Once Ca+ is bound to Troponin, the Tropomyosin shifts position and exposes the active sites of Actin.
  3. When the active sites are exposed, the heads on the thick filament Myosin are able to bind to Actin using ATP.
  4. ATP catalyzes into ADP and a Phosphate group when activating Myosin to bind to Actin. When the extra Phosphate group is released, Myosin pulls Actin toward the Sarcomere center.