Title: Muscles and Muscle Tissue
1Chapter 9
- Muscles and Muscle Tissue
- J.F. Thompson, Ph.D. J.R. Schiller, Ph.D. G.
Pitts, Ph.D.
2Muscles and Muscle Tissues
- Use the extra PPTs and audio PPTs to review
muscle anatomy - CH 9 Skeletal Muscle Histology
- CH 9 Skeletal Muscle Development
- CH 9 Cardiac Muscle Histology
- CH 9 Smooth Muscle Tissue
At Dr. Thompsons website
3Some Muscle Terminology
- Myology the scientific study of muscle
- muscle fibers muscle cells
- myo, mys sarco word roots referring to muscle
4Three Types of Muscle
- Skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscle differ in
- Microscopic anatomy
- Location
- Regulation by the endocrine system and the
nervous system
5Functions of Muscle Tissue
- Motion external (walking, running, talking,
looking) and internal (heartbeat, blood pressure,
digestion, elimination) body part movements - Posture maintain body posture
- Stabilization stabilize joints muscles have
tone even at rest - Thermogenesis generating heat by normal
contractions and by shivering
6Functional Characteristics
- Excitability (irritability)
- the ability to receive and respond to a stimulus
(chemical signal molecules) - Contractility
- ability of muscle tissue to shorten
- Extensibility
- the ability to be stretched without damage
- most muscles are arranged in functionally
opposing pairs as one contracts, the other
relaxes, which permits the relaxing muscle to be
stretched back - Elasticity
- the ability to return to its original shape
- Conductivity (impulse transmission)
- the ability to conduct excitation over length of
muscle
7Myofibrils Sarcomeres -Myofilaments
- Thin filaments actin (plus some tropomyosin
troponin) - Thick filaments myosin
- Elastic filaments titin (connectin) attaches
myosin to the Z discs (very high mol. wt.)
8Sarcomere
- The foundation of the muscle cells contractile
organelle, myofibril - The functional unit of striated muscle
contraction - The myofilaments between two adjacent Z discs
- The regular geometric arrangement of the actin
and myosin produces the visible banding pattern
(striations)
9Myosin Protein
- Rod-like tail with two heads
- Each head contains ATPase and an actin-binding
site point to the Z line - Tails point to the M line
- Splitting ATP releases energy which causes the
head to ratchet and pull on actin fibers
10Thick (Myosin) Myofilaments
- Each thick filament contains many myosin units
woven together
11Thin (Actin) Myofilaments
- Two G actin strands are arranged into helical
strands - Each G actin has a binding site for myosin
- Two tropomyosin filaments spiral around the actin
strands - Troponin regulatory proteins (switch molecules)
may bind to actin and tropomyosin have Ca2
binding sites
12Muscle Fiber Triads
- Triads 2 terminal cisternae 1 T tubule
- Sarcoplasmic reticulum (SER) modified smooth ER,
stores Ca2 ions - Terminal cisternae large flattened sacs of the
SER - Transverse (T) tubules inward folding of the
sarcolemma
13Regulation of Contraction The Neuromuscular
Junction
- The Neuromuscular Junction
- where motor neurons communicate with the muscle
fibers - composed of an axon terminal, a synapse and a
motor end plate - axon terminal the end of the motor neurons
branches (axon) - motor end plate the specialized region of the
muscle cell plasma membrane adjacent to the axon
terminal
14The Neuromuscular Junction
- Synapse point of communication is a small gap
- Synaptic cleft the space between axon terminal
motor end plate - Synaptic vesicles membrane-enclosed sacs in the
axon terminals containing the neurotransmitter
15The Neuromuscular Junction
- Neurotransmitter the chemical signal molecule
that diffuses across the synapse, i.e.,
acetylcholine, ACh) - Acetylcholine (ACh) receptors integral membrane
proteins which bind ACh
16Generation of an Action Potential (Excitation)
- Binding of the neurotransmitter (ACh) causes the
ligand-gated Na channels to open - Opening of the Na channels depolarizes the
sarcolemma (cell membrane)
17Generation of an Action Potential
- Initial depolarization causes adjacent
voltage-gated Na channels to open Na ions flow
in, beginning an action potential - Action potential a large transient
depolarization of the membrane potential - transmitted over the entire sarcolemma (and down
the T tubules)
18Generation of an Action Potential
19Generation of an Action Potential
20Generation of an Action Potential
- Repolarization the return to polarization due to
the closing voltage-gated Na channels and the
opening of voltage gated K channels - Refractory period the time during membrane
repolarization when the muscle fiber cannot
respond to a new stimulus (a few milliseconds) -
- All-or-none response once an action potential is
initiated it results in a complete contraction of
the muscle cell
21Excitation-Contraction Coupling
- The action potential (excitation) travels over
the sarcolemma, including T-tubules - Voltage sensors on the T-tubules cause
corresponding SR receptors to open gated channels
and release Ca2 ions - And now, for the interactions between calcium and
the sarcomere
22The Sliding Filament Model of Muscle Contraction
- Thin and thick filaments slide past each other to
shorten each sarcomere and, thus, each myofibril - The cumulative effect is to shorten the muscle
23http//www.lab.anhb.uwa.edu.au/mb140/CorePages/Mus
cle/Muscle.htmSKELETAL
- This simulation of the sliding filament model can
also be viewed on line at the web site below
along with additional information on muscle
tissue
24Calcium (Ca2)
- The on-off switch allows myosin to bind to
actin
off
on
25Calcium Movements Inside Muscle Fibers
- An action potential causes the release of Ca2
ions (from the cisternae of the SR) - Ca2 combines with troponin, causing a change in
the position of tropomyosin, allowing actin to
bind to myosin and be pulled (slide) - Ca2 pumps on the SR remove calcium ions from the
sarcoplasm when the stimulus ends
26The Power Stroke ATP
- Cross bridge attachment. Myosin heads bind to
actin - The working stroke. myosin changes shape (pulls
actins toward M line) releases ADP Pi - Cross bridge detachment. Myosin heads bind to a
new ATP releases actin
27The Power Stroke ATP
- 4. "Cocking" of the myosin head. ATP is
hydrolyzed (split) to ADP Pi this provides
potential energy for the next stroke
28The Ratchet Effect
- Repeat steps 1-4 The ratchet action repeats
the process, shortening all the sarcomeres and
the myofibrils, until Ca2 ions are removed from
the sarcoplasm or the ATP supply is exhausted
Power Stroke
Attach
Repeat
Release
29RATCHET EFFECT ANIMATION
- http//www.sci.sdsu.edu/movies/actin_myosin_gif.ht
ml
30Excitation-Contraction Coupling
- The action potential (excitation) travels over
the sarcolemma, including T-tubules - Voltage sensors on the T-tubules cause
corresponding SR receptors to open gated channels
and release Ca2 ions - Ca2 binds to troponin, causing tropomyosin to
move out of its blocking position - Myosin forms cross bridges to actin, the power
stroke occurs, filaments slide, muscle shortens - Calsequestrin and calmodulin help regulate Ca2
levels inside muscle cells
31Destruction of Acetylcholine
- Acetylcholinesterase an enzyme that rapidly
breaks down acetylcholine is located in the
neuromuscular junction - Prevents continuous excitation (generation of
more action potentials) - Many drugs and diseases interfere with events in
the neuromuscular junction - Myasthenia gravis loss of function at ACh
receptors (autoimmune disease?) - Curare (poison arrow toxin) binds irreversibly
to and blocks the ACh receptors
32MUSCLE CONTRACTION
- One power stroke shortens a muscle about 1
- Normal muscle contraction shortens a muscle by
about 35 - cross bridge (ratchet effect) cycle repeats
- continue repeating power strokes, continue
pulling - increasing overlap of fibers Z lines come
together - about half the myosin molecules are attached at
any time - Cross bridges are maintained until Ca2 levels
decrease - Ca2 is released in response to the action
potential delivered by the motor neuron - Ca2 ATPase pumps Ca2 ions back into the SR,
using more ATP
33RIGOR MORTIS IN DEATH
- Ca2 ions leak from SR causing binding of actin
and myosin and some contraction of the muscles - Lasts 24 hours, then enzymatic tissue
disintegration eliminates it in another 12 hours
This suicide victim used a shotgun to kill
himself when it was removed, his arms retained
this posture.
34Skeletal Muscle Motor Units
- The Motor Unit Motor Neuron Muscle Fibers to
which it connects (Synapses)
35Skeletal Muscle Motor Units
- The size of Motor Units varies
- Small - two muscle fibers/unit (larynx, eyes)
- Large hundreds to thousands/unit (biceps,
gastrocnemius, lower back muscles) - The individual muscle cells/fibers of each unit
are spread throughout the muscle for smooth
efficient operation of the muscle as a whole
36The Myogram
- Myogram a recording of muscle contraction
-
- Stimulus nerve impulse or electrical charge
- Twitch a single contraction of all the muscle
fibers in a motor unit (one nerve signal)
37Myogram
- 1. latent period delay between stimulus and
response - 2. contraction phase tension or shortening
occurs - 3. relaxation phase relaxation or lengthening
- refractory period time interval after excitation
when muscle will not respond to a new stimulus
38Muscle Twitchs
- All or None Rule all the muscle fibers of a
motor unit contract all the way when stimulated
39Graded Muscle Responses
- Force of muscle contraction varies depending on
need. How much tension is needed? - Twitch does not provide much force
- Contraction force can be altered in 3 ways
- 1. changing the frequency of stimulation
(temporal summation) - 2. changing the stimulus strength (recruitment)
- 3. changing the muscles length
40Temporal Summation
- Temporal (wave) summation contractions repeated
before complete relaxation, leads to
progressively stronger contractions - unfused (incomplete) tetanus frequency of
stimulation allows only incomplete relaxation - fused (complete) tetanus frequency of
stimulation allows no relaxation
41Treppe the staircase effect
- warming up of a muscle fiber
42Multiple Motor Unit Recruitment (Summation)
- The stimulation of more motor units leads to a
more forceful muscle contraction
43The Size Principle
- As greater force is required, the nervous
system will stimulate more motor units, and motor
units with larger fibers and larger numbers of
fibers to achieve the desired strength of
contraction.
44Stretch Length-Tension Relationship
- Stretch (sarcomere length) determines the number
of cross bridges - extensive overlap of actin with myosin less
tension - optimal overlap of actin with myosin most
tension - reduced overlap of actin with myosin less
tension - Optimal overlap most cross bridges available for
the power stroke and least structural interference
more resistance
most cross bridges/least resistance
fewest cross bridges
45Stretch Length-Tension Relationship
- Optimal length - Lo
- maximum number of cross bridges
- no overlap of actin fibers from opposite ends of
the sarcomere - normal working muscle range from 70 - 130 of Lo
46Contraction of a Skeletal Muscle
- Isometric Contraction Muscle does not shorten
- Tension increases
47Contraction of a Skeletal Muscle
- Isotonic Contraction tension does not change
- Muscle (length) shortens
48Muscle Tone
- Regular small contractions caused by spinal
reflexes - Respond to tendon stretch receptor sensory input
- Activate different motor units over time
- Provide constant tension development
- muscles are firm
- but do not shorten
- e.g., neck, back and leg muscles
- maintain posture
49Muscle Metabolism
- Energy availability
- Not much ATP is available at any given moment
- ATP is needed for cross bridges and Ca removal
- Maintaining ATP levels is vital for continued
activity - Three ways to replenish ATP
- 1. Creatine Phosphate energy storage system
- 2. Anaerobic Glycolysis -- Lactic Acid system
- 3. Aerobic Respiration
50Direct Phosphorylation Creatine Phosphate
System
- CrP stored in cell
- Allows for rapid ATP replenishment
- Only a small amount available (10-30 seconds
worth)
51Anaerobic Glycolysis Lactic Acid System
- Anaerobic system - no O2 required
- Very inefficient, does not create much ATP
- Only useful in short term situations (30 sec - 1
min) - Produces lactic acid as a by-product
52Aerobic System
- Uses oxygen for ATP production
- Oxygen comes from the RBCs in the blood and the
myoglobin storage depot - Uses many substrates carbohydrates, lipids,
proteins - Good for long term exercise
- May provide 90-100 of the needed ATP during
these periods
53Summary of Muscle Metabolism
54Oxygen Debt
- The amount of oxygen needed to restore muscle
tissue (and the body) to the pre-exercise state - Muscle O2, ATP, creatine phosphate, and glycogen
levels, and a normal pH must be restored after
any vigorous exercise - Circulating lactic acid is converted/recycled
back to glucose by the liver
55Factors Affecting theForce of Contraction
- Number of muscle fibers contracting (recruitment)
- Size of the muscle
- Frequency of stimulation
- Degree of muscle stretch when the contraction
begins - Series elastic elements
56Series Elastic Elements
- All of the noncontractile structures of a muscle
- Connective tissue coverings and tendons
- Elastic elements of sarcomeres
- Internal load force generated by myofibrils on
the series elastic elements - External load force generated by series elastic
elements on load
57Muscle Fiber Type Speed of Contraction
- Slow oxidative fibers contract slowly, have slow
acting myosin ATPases, and are fatigue resistant
(red) - Fast oxidative fibers contract quickly, have fast
myosin ATPases, and have moderate resistance to
fatigue - Fast glycolytic fibers contract quickly, have
fast myosin ATPases, and are easily fatigued
(white)
58Force, Velocity, and Duration of Muscle
Contraction
59Homeostatic Imbalances
- The muscular dystrophies (MD) are a group of more
than 30 genetic diseases characterized by
progressive weakness and degeneration of the
skeletal muscles that control movement. - Some forms of MD are seen in infancy or
childhood, while others may not appear until
middle age or later. - The disorders differ in terms of
- the distribution and extent of muscle weakness
- (some forms of MD also affect cardiac muscle)
- age of onset
- rate of progression
- pattern of inheritance
60Homeostatic Imbalances
- Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
- Inherited lack of functional gene for formation
of a protein, dystrophin, that helps maintain the
integrity of the sarcolemma - Onset in early childhood, victims rarely live to
adulthood
61End Chapter 9
- Some extra slides for your review
- follow this slide.
62Smooth Muscle Contractions
- Peristalsis alternating contractions and
relaxations of smooth muscles that squeeze
substances through the lumen of hollow organs - Segmentation contractions and relaxations of
smooth muscles that mix substances in the lumen
of hollow organs
Peristalsis Animation
63Developmental Aspects of the Muscular System
- Muscle tissue develops from embryonic mesoderm
called myoblasts (except the muscles of the iris
of the eye and the arrector pili muscles in the
skin) - Multinucleated skeletal muscles form by fusion of
myoblasts - The growth factor agrin stimulates the clustering
of ACh receptors at newly forming motor end
plates - As muscles are brought under the control of the
somatic nervous system, the numbers of fast and
slow fibers are also determined - Cardiac and smooth muscle myoblasts do not fuse
but develop gap junctions at an early embryonic
stage
64Regeneration of Muscle Tissue
- Cardiac and skeletal muscle become amitotic, but
can lengthen and thicken - Myoblast-like satellite cells show very limited
regenerative ability - Satellite (stem) cells can fuse to form new
skeletal muscle fibers - Cardiac cells lack satellite cells
- Smooth muscle has good regenerative ability
65Developmental Aspects After Birth
- Muscular development reflects neuromuscular
coordination - Development occurs head-to-toe, and
proximal-to-distal - Peak natural neural control of muscles is
achieved by midadolescence - Athletics and training can improve neuromuscular
control
66Developmental Aspects Male and Female
- There is a biological basis for greater strength
in men than in women - Womens skeletal muscle makes up 36 of their
body mass - Mens skeletal muscle makes up 42 of their body
mass
67Developmental Aspects Male and Female
- These differences are due primarily to the male
sex hormone testosterone - With more muscle mass, men are generally stronger
than women - Body strength per unit muscle mass, however, is
the same in both sexes
68Developmental Aspects Age Related
- With age, connective tissue increases and muscle
fibers decrease - Muscles become stringier and more sinewy
- By age 80, 50 of muscle mass is lost
(sarcopenia) - Regular exercise reverses sarcopenia
- Aging of the cardiovascular system affects every
organ in the body - Atherosclerosis may block distal arteries,
leading to intermittent claudication and causing
severe pain in leg muscles
69End Chapter 9