Skeletal Muscle Structure and Function Flashcards

1
Q

What are the functions of muscle?

A

Force production for locomotion, postural support, breathing, and heat production during cold stress.

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2
Q

Organization of muscle

A

muscle, fascicles, muscle fibers, myofibrils, myofilaments (actin and myosin).

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3
Q

What is the role of the connective tissue in muscle?

A

Connective tissue layers connect and transfer force to tendon which transfers force to bone

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4
Q

What are the 3 layers of connective tissue?

A

Epimysium: covers entire muscle

Perimysium: covers fascicles (bundles of fibers) and contains nerve and blood vessels.

Endomysium: covers individual muscle fibers.

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5
Q

What is the primary content in a muscle fiber?

A

Sarcolemma: membrane

Sarcoplasm: cytoplasm

Nuclei: contain many

Mitochondria: densely packed

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6
Q

What is the sarcoplasmic reticulum?

A

Serves as storage for calcium and surrounds each myofibril and runs parallel.

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7
Q

What is the smallest functional unit of muscle?

A

Sarcomere

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8
Q

Name the two principal contractile proteins (myofilaments) in skeletal muscle

A

Thin filament (actin)

Thick filament (myosin)

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9
Q

What is the neurotransmitter released at the neuromuscular junction?

A

Acetylcholine

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10
Q

What is the Excitation-contraction coupling sequence?

A
  1. Motor neuron stimulation of muscle fiber:
    - Nerve impulse transmitted from cns to motor neuron toward the muscle fiber
    - Release of Ach from motor neuron to nmj
    - Ach binds to its receptor on the sarcolemma
  2. Muscle fiber action potential:
    - Action potential transmitted down T-tubules which leads to the release of calcium from sarcoplasmic reticulum.
  3. Crossbridge cycling:
    - Calcium binds to troponin pulling tropomyosin off binding site and myosin heads attach to the actin filament.
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11
Q

What is the process of muscle contraction (crossbridge cycle)?

A
  1. Reset: ATP on myosin head is hydrolyzed by myosin ATPase to ADP + Pi (energized)
  2. Attach: when motor nerve is stimulated, calcium is released and binds to troponin, tropomyosin moves, exposes myosin binding site on actin, energized myosin forms a strong bond with actin.
  3. Pull: ADP release causes head to relax while still bound to myosin which allows it to pull on actin (power stroke, shortens sarcomere)
  4. Release: a new ATP binds to myosin, allowing myosin to release from actin.
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12
Q

What is the role of myosin ATPase in the process of muscle contraction?

A

Each myosin head can move and bind actin when ATP is hydrolyzed by myosin ATPase.

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13
Q

What is the requirement of ATP for muscle contraction and relaxation?

A

Contraction: ATP is necessary to move the myosin head toward myosin.

Relaxation: binding of new ATP is necessary for the release of myosin from actin + calcium is actively pumped back into SR and ATP is required.

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14
Q

What are the types of muscle actions?

A

Isotonic (dynamic) contractions: muscle changes length and moves a load (force is greater than resistance)

Isometric (static) contractions: tension in the muscle increases but the muscle neither shortens nor lengthens (cross bridges form but actin is not moving and resistance is greater than force).

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15
Q

What is the motor unit organization/structure?

A

Consists of motor neurons together and all the muscle fibers it stimulates + multiple motor units support an individual muscle, not just one.

  • Each muscle fiber is innervated by only 1 motor neuron.
  • Not all motor units will be activated at the same time.
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16
Q

What is the size principle?

A

Motor units are recruited according to their size

17
Q

What are the main factors that determine the ability for muscles to produce force?

A
  • The amount of force generated by a single fiber is related to the number of actin/myosin cross-bridges formed.
  • The amount of force generated by an entire muscle is dependent on several factors including the number
  • (increasing the strength of the stimulus recruits more motor units = more muscle fibers = more force) and types of muscle fibers recruited (increasing the strength of the stimulus recruits fast twitch motor units which innervate fast twitch/type II fibers),
  • Length of the muscle during contraction aka sarcomere length. (ideal length is resting or slightly stretched which enhances the interaction between actin and myosin),
  • Frequency of stimulation of the motor units, and the velocity of contraction.