Muscle Structure and Adaptation Flashcards

1
Q

How does skeletal muscle form in embryonic development?

A

It is formed from blocks of paraxial mesoderm in the developing embryo.

The paracrine signalling from the notochord + neural tube triggers a mesenchymal epithelial transition.

Somite forms, and the hollow ball of epithelial cells undergo an epithelial to mesenchymal transition

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2
Q

What does the sclerotome form?

A

Bone, ribs, cartilage

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3
Q

What does the myotome form?

A

Muscle precursors

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4
Q

What does the syndetome form?

A

Tendons

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5
Q

What does the dermomyotome form?

A

Provides a source of new muscle cells to the developing embryo as well as the dorsal dermis

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6
Q

What happens to mesoderm cells when paracrine factors are expressed?

A

These mesodermal cells become committed to a myogenic fate and form myoblasts

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7
Q

What happens to the myoblasts after they differentiate?

A

They exit the cell cycle marked by the expression of myogenic factors, which cause terminal differentiation of the muscle fibres where they start forming tubes and structural proteins start being expressed

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8
Q

What do myotubes form?

A

Align and fuse together to form a muscle fibre

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9
Q

What are the two phases of muscle development?

A

Primary round: makes the architecture for the fibres

Secondary round: builds on the muscle fibres

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10
Q

What are satellite cells?

A

Muscle stem cells which sit on the muscle fibres and sit dormant until they are activated in the case of muscle regeneration, where they start dividing, forming myotubes

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11
Q

What can affect fibre number?

A

Generally speaking it is genetically determined. But it can also be affected by temperature, hormones, nutrition, and innervation

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12
Q

What is hypertrophy?

A

An increase in muscle mass due to the increase in muscle fibre size (happens after birth)

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13
Q

How does hypertrophy occur?

A

Satellite cells start dividing and fuse to the myofiber and start producing more structural proteins which increase its cross section and size

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14
Q

Why does the muscle fibre maintain a cytoplasm:nuclei ratio?

A

We need nuclei along that long cell to produce the proteins required for the muscle fibre to function

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15
Q

What is hyperplasia?

A

An increase in muscle mass by increasing fibre number

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16
Q

What are the proposed mechanisms for hyperplasia?

A

1) The actual muscle fibre itself splits and there is hypertrophy which kicks in and increases muscle mass that way
2) Can occur through proliferation of the satellite cells which then start to use the architecture of the muscle fibres already there, and they start forming their own muscle fibres and fusing together

17
Q

What are the different isoforms of myofibrillar proteins?

A

There may be changes in amino acids in different muscle types for titin, and this will convey different elastic properties to the sarcomere

There could be changes in troponin and tropomyosin, which will create different sensitivity to the calcium released from the SR

There can be differences in myosin isoforms, which can convey more rapid or slower speed of contraction. These together can then also convey a resistance to fatigue

18
Q

What are Type I fibres?

A
  • slow titch muscle fibres
  • produce a slow, maintained contraction which does not easily fatigue
  • aerobic respiration
  • high mitochondrial count
  • undergo oxidative phosphorylation
  • extensive blood supply and abundant myoglobin
19
Q

What are Type II fibres?

A
  • fast muscle
  • fatigue very easily
  • mainly anaerobic metabolism
  • fewer mitochondria
  • glycolytic in nature
  • poor vascularisation and low levels of myoglobin
20
Q

Generally speaking, what do different types of people have in terms of type I and type II fibres?

A

untrained individuals: 50:50 ratio of fast and slow twitch muscle

long + middle distance: 60-70% slow muscle

sprinters: 80% fast twitch muscle

21
Q

What is the muscle profile of a powerlifter?

A
  • muscles are hypertrophied
  • highly glycolytic
  • fatigue easily
  • high muscle to body mass ratio
  • muscle size interferes with locomotion
22
Q

What is the muscle profile of a marathon runner?

A
  • muscles small but fatigue resistant
  • work over long periods of time
  • not explosive strength
  • muscles dense and strong for their size, with high oxidative capacity
23
Q

What is the muscle profile of a sprinter?

A
  • rapid powerful contraction
  • easily fatigued at maximum effort
  • low oxidative capacity via mitochondria
  • high force
24
Q

What are the 3 main types of myosin?

A

2a

2x

2b

25
Q

What are the differences in muscle profiles between men and women?

A
  • females have more slow muscle fibres
  • males have more fast muscle fibres
  • males have a larger fibre cross sectional area so will hypertrophy easier than women
26
Q

How is testosterone involved in muscle development?

A

Promotes muscle differentiation at the expense of fat cells, so is a natural anabolic androgenic steroid which will push cells down the myogenic lineage, but inhibit the formation of adipocytes

Increases the contribution to the muscle fibre, and produces more structural proteins, increasing the muscle fibre size

27
Q

What are some risks of taking anabolic steroids?

A
  • high blood pressure
  • cardiac problems
  • respiratory problems
  • liver disease
28
Q

What happens if muscle fibres cannot regenerate themselves?

A

you get fibrosis and scar tissue

29
Q

What is the normal process of a tear being repaired in muscle?

A
  • necrosis
  • blood fills wound area
  • haemotoma
  • satellite cells divide and use haemotoma to build upon and fuse together
  • expression of MYF5 and myoD
  • muscle fibres self renew
  • vascularisation and innervation
  • homeostasis
30
Q

What are the 3 main phases of regeneration?

A

1) Degeneration/inflammation phase
Myofibre rupture and necrosis, formation of hematoma, inflammatory response

2) Regeneration phase
Phagocytosis of damaged tissue, SC activation and proliferation

3) Remodelling phase
Maturation of regenerated myofibers, restoration of blood supply and innervation, recovery of muscle functional capacity and also fibrosis and scar tissue formation

31
Q

What is sarcopenia?

A

The decline of muscle mass with age

32
Q

What is a loss in muscle mass associated with?

A

A gain in fat mass.

There are changes to mitochondria, and a reduced endocrine function due to reduced physical activity