Chapter 10: Muscle Tissue - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chapter 10: Muscle Tissue

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Title: Chapter 10: Muscle Tissue


1
Chapter 10Muscle Tissue
2
Muscle Tissue
  • A primary tissue type, divided into
  • Cardiac muscle
  • Smooth muscle
  • Skeletal muscle
  • Attached to bones
  • Allows us to move
  • Contains CT, nerves and blood vessels

3
Functions of Skeletal Muscles
  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4.
  • 5.

4
CT Organization 3 layers
1. Epimysium
  • Surrounds entire muscle
  • Separates muscle from surrounding tissues
  • Connected to deep fascia

5
1. Perimysium
  • Divides the skeletal muscle into a series of
    compartments
  • Each compartment contains a bundle of muscle
    fibers

6
1. Endomysium
  • Surrounds individual skeletal muscle fibers
  • Interconnects adjacent muscle fibers
  • Satellite Cells -

7
At the end of a muscle
  • All 3 layers come together to form a
  • Both attach skeletal muscles to bones
  • Tendon fibers extend into the bone matrix

8
Microanatomy of Skeletal Muscle Fibers
  • Skeletal muscle cells are called fibers
  • Enormous
  • Multinucleate
  • Myoblasts fuse during development to form
    individual skeletal muscle fibers

9
Microanatomy of Skeletal Muscle Fibers
  • Sarcolemma cell membrane of muscle fiber
  • Surround sarcoplasm
  • Change in the transmembrane potential is the
    start of a contraction
  • Transverse Tubules continuous with sarcolemma
    and extends into the sarcoplasm
  • form passageways through muscle fibers
  • Filled with extracellular fluid
  • Action potentials

10
Microanatomy of Skeletal Muscle Fibers
  • Myofibrils cylindrical structures encircled by
    T tubules
  • As long as the cell
  • Made of myofilaments
  • Thin filaments - actin
  • Thick filaments myosin
  • Responsible for muscle fiber contraction
  • Mitochondria and glycogen

11
Microanatomy of Skeletal Muscle Fibers
  • Sarcoplasmic Reticulum similar to ER of other
    cells
  • Forms network around each myofibril
  • Terminal cisternae expanded chambers of SR on
    either side of a T tubule
  • Ca2 ions storage
  • Triad pair of terminal cisternae plus a T
    tubule
  • Separate fluids

12
Microanatomy of Skeletal Muscle Fibers
  • Sarcomere repeating contractile units that make
    up myofibrils
  • Smallest functional unit in muscle fibers
  • Muscle contraction
  • Made up of thick and thin filaments,
    stabilizing proteins and regulating proteins
  • Striated

13
Microanatomy of Skeletal Muscle Fibers
  • A bands dark bands at center of sarcomere
  • Thick filaments (myosin)
  • Contains
  • M line center of A band, connects each thick
    filament together
  • H zone lighter region on either side of M line,
    contains thick filaments
  • Zone of overlap thick and thin filaments
    overlap one another

14
Microanatomy of Skeletal Muscle Fibers
  • I bands light bands on both sides of A band
  • Thin filaments (actin)
  • Contains
  • Z lines boundary between adjacent sarcomeres
  • Titin protein that aligns thick and thin
    filaments
  • Extends from thick filaments

15
Level 1 Skeletal Muscle
Level 4 Myofibril
Level 2 Muscle Fascicle
Level 5 Sarcomere
Level 3 Muscle Fiber
16
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17
Muscle Contraction
  • Sliding Filament Theory
  • Caused by interactions of thick and thin
    filaments
  • Triggered by free Ca2 in sarcoplasm

18
Muscle Contraction
  • Thin Filaments made of 4 proteins
  • F actin 2 twisted strands of G actin, contain
    active sites for the binding of myosin
  • Nebulin holds 2 strands of G actin together
  • Tropomyosin covers G actin active sites to
    prevent actin/myosin interactions
  • Troponin holds tropomyosin to G actin AND
    contains a site for the binding of Ca2
  • Holds until Ca2 binds to the active site
  • Contraction can only occur if position changes

19
Muscle Contraction
  • Thick Filaments consist of a pair of myosin
    subunits wrapped around each other
  • Tail binds to other myosin molecules
  • Head 2 subunits, project towards nearest thin
    filament
  • During muscle contractions myosin heads pivot
    towards thin filaments, forming cross-bridges
    with G actin active sites

20
Muscle Contraction
  • Sliding Filament Theory
  • Thin filaments slide towards M line shortening
  • A band remains the same, but the Z lines move
    closer together

21
Muscle Contraction
  • Neuromuscular Junction - NMJ
  • Where the action potential starts
  • Each branch ends at a synaptic terminal, which
    contains mitochondria and Acetylcholine
  • Neurotransmitter that alters the permeability of
    the sarcolemma

22
Muscle Contraction
  • Synaptic cleft
  • Motor end plate
  • Both contain AChE breaks down Ach
  • Action potential travels along the nerve axon and
    ends at the synaptic terminal, which changes the
    permeability
  • ACh is released

23
Muscle Contraction
  • ACh diffuses across the synaptic cleft and binds
    to ACh receptors on motor end plate
  • Increase in membrane permeability to sodium ions
    that rush into the sarcoplasm
  • Keeps going until AChE removes all ACh
  • Travels along sarcolemma to T tubules and leads
    to excitation-contraction coupling -
  • Action potential leads to contraction
  • Triads release Ca2
  • Triggers muscle contractions

24
Muscle Contraction at Sarcomere
  • 1. Exposure of active sites
  • Calcium ions bind to troponin, changing its
    position and shifting tropomyosin away from
    active sites
  • 2. Attachment of cross-bridges
  • Myosin heads bind to active sites

25
Muscle Contraction at Sarcomere
  • 3. Pivoting
  • Power stroke
  • 4. Detachment of cross-bridges
  • ATP binds to myosin head, link is broken
  • Attach to another active site

26
Muscle Contraction at Sarcomere
  • 5. Reactivation of myosin
  • ATP to ADP and phosphate
  • Cycle is repeated
  • All sarcomeres contract at the same time
  • Contraction duration depends on
  • Duration of neural stimulus
  • Amount of free Ca2 ions in sarcoplasm
  • Availability of ATP
  • Muscle Contraction at Sarcomere

27
Muscle Contraction
  • 1. At NMJ, ACh is released and binds to
    receptors on sarcolemma
  • 2. Change in transmembrane potential results in
    action potential that spreads across entire
    surface of cell and T tubules
  • 3. SR releases stored calcium ions, increasing
    Ca2 around sarcomeres
  • 4. Calcium ions bind to troponin, which exposes
    active sites on thin filaments and cross-bridges
    form
  • 5. Contraction begins as repeated cycles of
    cross-bridge formation and detachment happen

28
Muscle Contraction
  • 6. ACh is broken down by AChE and action
    potential ends
  • 7. SR reabsorbs calcium ions and concentration
    in sarcoplasm decreases
  • 8. Active sites are re-covered
  • 9. Contraction ends
  • 10. Muscle relaxation sarcomeres remain
    uncontracted

29
Rigor Mortis
  • Stop in blood circulation causes skeletal muscles
    to be deprived of oxygen and nutrients
  • SR becomes unable to pump calcium ions out of
    sarcoplasm
  • Extra calcium ions trigger a sustained
    contraction
  • Cross-bridges form, but cannot detach
  • Lasts 15-25 hours after death

30
2 Types of Muscle Tension
  • Isotonic Contraction
  • Skeletal muscle changes length resulting in
    motion
  • If muscle tension gt resistance muscle shortens
    (concentric contraction)
  • If muscle tension lt resistance muscle lengthens
    (eccentric contraction)

31
2 Types of Muscle Contraction
  • Isometric Contraction
  • Muscle develops tension, but does not shorten

32
Resistance and Speed of Contraction
  • Inversely related
  • The heavier the resistance on a muscle
  • the longer it takes for shortening to begin
  • the less the muscle will shorten

33
Muscle Relaxation
  • After contraction, a muscle fiber returns to
    resting length by
  • Elastic forces
  • The pull of elastic elements (tendons and
    ligaments)
  • Expands the sarcomeres to resting length
  • Opposing muscle contractions
  • Reverse the direction of the original motion
  • The work of opposing skeletal muscle pairs
  • Gravity
  • Can take the place of opposing muscle contraction
    to return a muscle to its resting state

34
ATP and Muscle Contraction
  • Muscle contraction uses a lot of ATP
  • Muscles store enough energy to start contraction,
    but must manufacture more ATP
  • Generates ATP at the same rate that it is used
  • ATP and CP
  • ATP active energy model (aerobic and anaerobic)
  • Creatine Phosphate (CP) storage molecule for
    excess ATP in resting muscle
  • ATP 2 seconds
  • CP 15 seconds
  • Glycogen 130 seconds (anaerobic) and 40 mins
    (aerobic)
  • Fats

35
ATP and Muscle Contraction
  • At rest
  • Cells use fatty acids to create CP, ATP and
    glycogen rebuilding their storages (beta
    oxidation)
  • Moderate Activity
  • Cells use fatty acids or glucose and oxygen to
    produce ATP (aerobic respiration)
  • Muscle wont fatigue until all energy is used up
  • Marathon runners
  • Peak Activity
  • Cells use oxygen faster than it is supplied
  • Aerobic resp only provides 1/3 of needed ATP
  • Anaerobic resp provides the rest lactic acid

36
Muscle Metabolism
37
Muscle Fatigue
  • When muscles can no longer perform a required
    activity, they are fatigued
  • Results of Muscle Fatigue
  • Depletion of metabolic reserves
  • Damage to sarcolemma and SR
  • Low pH (lactic acid)
  • Muscle exhaustion and pain
  • The Recovery Period
  • The time required after exertion for muscles to
    return to normal
  • Oxygen becomes available
  • Mitochondrial activity resumes

38
Muscle Fatigue
  • The Cori Cycle
  • The removal and recycling of lactic acid by the
    liver
  • Liver converts lactic acid to pyruvic acid
  • Glucose is released to recharge muscle glycogen
    reserves
  • Oxygen Debt after exercise
  • Body needs more oxygen than usual to normalize
    metabolic activity
  • Heavy breathing

39
3 Types of Skeletal Fibers
  • Fast Fibers
  • Contract quickly
  • High CP
  • Large diameter, huge glycogen reserves and few
    mitochondria
  • Strong contractions, but fatigue quickly
  • White meat chicken breast
  • Slow Fibers
  • Slow to contract and slow to fatigue
  • Low CP
  • Small diameter, but a lot of mitochondria
  • High oxygen supply
  • Contain myoglobin (red pigment, binds to oxygen)
  • Dark meat chicken legs

40
3 Types of Muscle Fibers
  • Intermediate Fibers
  • Mid-sized
  • Low myoglobin
  • More capillaries than fast fibers, slower to
    fatigue
  • Table 10-3, page 298
  • Human Muscles

41
  • Muscle Hypertrophy - muscle Growth from heavy
    training
  • increases diameter of muscle fibers
  • increases number of myofibrils
  • increases mitochondria, glycogen reserves
  • Muscle Atrophy lack of muscle activity
  • Reduced in muscle size, tone and power

42
Physical Conditioning
  • Anaerobic Endurance
  • Uses fast fibers, fatigues quickly with strenuous
    activities
  • 50 m dash, weightlifting
  • Improved by frequent, brief, intensive workouts
    interval training
  • Aerobic Endurance supported by mitochondria
  • Prolonged activity uses a lot of oxygen and
    nutrients
  • Marathon running
  • Improved by repetitive and cardiovascular
    training

43
Cardiac Muscle Tissue
  • Striated tissue
  • Smaller cells with single nucleus
  • Short T-tubules and sarcoplasm
  • No triads or terminal cisternae
  • All aerobic
  • High in myoglobin and mitochondria
  • Intercalated discs

44
Smooth Muscle
  • Blood vessels, reproductive and digestive
    systems, etc
  • Different arrangement of actin and myosin
  • Non-striated

45
Characteristics of Skeletal, Cardiac, and Smooth
Muscle
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