Smooth Mucle Flashcards

1
Q

What are the characteristics of smooth muscle?

A
Fusiform cells
Single nuclei
Nonstriated
Found in walls of hollow organs, blood vessels, eye, glands, uterus, skin
Autorhythmicity
Gap-junctions
Dense Bodies, no intermidiate filaments
No T-tubules, caveolae may act as these
Ca++ comes from ECF
Fewer mitochondria
Unvoluntary
Slow, wavelike contractions
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2
Q

What are the three types of filaments in smooth muscle?

A
Thick myosin filaments (long)
Thin actin filament (tropomyosin but NO troponin)
Intermediate filaments (mainly forms cytoskeletal framework not for contraction)
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3
Q

What is the regulatory protein if smooth muscle?

A

Calmodulin (CaM)

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4
Q

What are the two major types of muscle?

A

Multiunit smooth muscles- neurogenic

Single unit smooth muscle-myogenic

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5
Q

What is the meaning of neurogenic?

A

The motor neurons nerve fiber stimulates one cell and the AP is propagated through gap-junctions
Autoexcitable

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6
Q

What is the meaning of myogenic?

A

Each cell is stimulated by an axon to create contraction

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7
Q

Where can multiunit smooth muscle be found?

A
Walls of large blood vessels
Large airways to lungs
Ciliary muscles if eye
Iris of eye
Pilo-erector muscle
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8
Q

Where can Single unit smooth muscles be found?

A
Wall of GIT
Large blood vessels
Utefter
Bile duct
Uterus
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9
Q

What are the arrengement of singleunit smooth muscle?

A

It is unitary
Sheaths/bundles of fibres with gap-junctions between, works as a Single unit
If one fiber is excited, all are= functional syncytium

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10
Q

What are the arrangement of multiunit smooth muscle?

A

Individual fibers

Each fiber is independently excited

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11
Q

What type of NM junctions do multiunit have?

A

Contact junction between autonomic nerves and muscle fiber and release NT as nor-epinephrine

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12
Q

What type of NM junction to singleunit have?

A

Diffuse junction, no contact with nerve cell

NT is released near the muscle fiber

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13
Q

How is the multiunit controlled?

A

Mainly through nervous stimuli (ANS)

No spontaneous contraction

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14
Q

How is the singleunit controlled?

A

Mainly non-nervous stimuli

Spontaneous contractions

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15
Q

What are the mechanism of smooth muscle contraction?

A

Corkscrew like

Dense Bodies and the filaments forms a “net” around the cell

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16
Q

Describe the activation of myosin cross-bridge in smooth muscle

A

Calmodulin is avtivated by Ca++
Ca++-Calmodulin activates myosin light chain kinase (MLCK)
Through phosphorylation of ATP the phosphorylated myosin cross-bridge is activated and binds to actin

17
Q

What is the mechanism of smooth muscle contraction?

A

The influx of Ca++ and release of Ca++ from SR increase concentration
Ca++ binds to Calmodulin
Ca++-Calmodulin activates MLCK
MLCK phosphorylates light chains in myosin heads and increase myosin ATPase activity
Active myosin cross-bridges slide along actin and creates muscle tension

18
Q

What is the mechanism of smooth muscle relaxation?

A

The Ca++ concentration in ICF decreases due to Ca++ being pumped out of cell or reabsorbed into SR
Ca++ unbinds from CaM
Myosin phospatase removes phosphate from myosin-myosin ATPase activity decreases
Less active myosin ATPase= decreased muscle tension

19
Q

Why is dephosphorylation of MLC needed?

A

The muscle doesnt stop contracting even if Ca++ leaves the cell since MLC been physically modified through phosphorylation, this change needs to be reversed.
Dephosphorylation is made by the enzyme MLCP- myosin light chain phosphatase

20
Q

What are the main differences in Ca++ activity of smooth vs skeletal muscle?

A

In smooth muscle Ca++ comes mainly from ICF, in skeletal muscle ONLY from SR
In smooth muscle a serial of chemical events occurs, in skeletal muscle there is a physical remidelling of troponin and tropomyosin
In smooth muscle a phosphorylation of myosin cross-bridging in thick filaments occurs, in skeletal muscle there is an uncovering of cross-bridge binding sites on actin in thin filaments