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Muscle Types

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Muscle Types There are 3 types of muscles Skeletal muscle skeletal movement Cardiac muscle heart movement Smooth muscle peristalsis (pushes substances ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Muscle Types


1
Muscle Types
  • There are 3 types of muscles
  • Skeletal muscle skeletal movement
  • Cardiac muscle heart movement
  • Smooth muscle peristalsis
  • (pushes substances through hollow tubes)

2
Skeletal Muscles (focus)
  • Major Functions
  • 1. movement
  • 2. maintain posture
  • 3. stabilize joints
  • generate heat
  • facial expressions

3
  • Characteristics
  • 1. excitability (irritability) ability to
    respond to a stimulus (usually a
    neurotransmitter)
  • 2. contractility the ability to shorten when
    adequately stimulated
  • 3. extensibility the ability to be stretched
    muscles can be stretched beyond their normal
    resting length when relaxed
  • 4. elasticity the ability of a muscle fiber to
    resume its resting length after being stretched

4
  • Connective Tissue Wrappings
  • (external to deep)
  • 1. epimysium layer of connective tissue that
    surrounds the entire muscle blends into tendons
  • perimysium connective tissue extending inward
    from epimysium and separates muscle tissue into
    compartments called fascicles
  • fascicles groups of muscle fibers (cells)
  • 4. endomysium a sheet of connective tissue that
    surrounds each muscle fiber (myofiber)

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  • Nerve and Blood Supply
  • 1. Each skeletal muscle fiber is innervated
  • 2. Muscle tissue is vascular

8
  • Parts of Muscle Fibers - Muscle Cell Organelles
  • a. sarcolemma plasma membrane of muscle cell
    surrounds myofibers
  • b. sarcoplasm similar to cytoplasm contains
    large amounts of glycogen for energy

9
  • c. sarcoplasmic reticulum similar to
    endoplasmic reticulum of cells stores and
    releases Ca2 on demand when muscles are ready to
    contract
  • transverse tubules (t-tubules) channels that
    carry nerve impulses (action potentials) deep
    into the muscle cell
  • mitochondria - muscle cells have many for energy

10
  • Myofibrils
  • rod-like fibers that run parallel to the muscle
    cell
  • Hundreds to thousands in a muscle fiber
  • composed of striations repeating series of dark
    and light bands
  • What causes those striations?
  • The arrangement of myofilaments!

11
Structure of Myofilaments
  • The thick filaments are primarily made of myosin.
  • The thin filaments primarily contain actin.
  • Thin filaments also contain tropomyosin
    troponin.

12
View of myofilaments

13
  • Striation Pattern
  • A band dark appearance, made of primarily of
    thick filaments (myosin) some thin filaments
    (actin)
  • I band light appearance, made of thin filaments
  • Z line (disc) connects each myofibril to the
    next throughout the width of the muscle fiber Z
    line to Z line is one sarcomere the smallest
    functional unit of a muscle contraction
  • H Zone holds thick filaments together, only
    visible when the muscle fiber is relaxed

14
(Arranged From Largest to Smallest)
  • Muscle (organ)
  • Fascicles
  • Muscle cell
  • Myofibril
  • Myofilaments

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19
  • Contraction of Skeletal Muscle Cells
  • One motor neuron (nerve cell) may stimulate a few
    muscle cells or hundreds.
  • A motor neuron all the myofibers a motor unit
  • When an axon of a nerve cell reaches a muscle
    cell it branches into a number of axon terminals.
  • Each axon terminal forms junctions with
    sarcolemma of different muscle cells
    (neuromuscular junction - NMJ).
  • Although they are very close the axon and
    sarolemma do not touch directly this is a
    synaptic cleft.

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A Blast from the past . . .Active Transport!
  • Sodium / potassium pump, maintains cell resting
    potential at -70mV (charge inside a cell) a
    change is this charge 30mV will cause an action
    potential
  • (nerve impulse)

2 K in for every 3 Na out
23
Actions Occurring At NMJ Web animations
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  • An action potential travels along an axon to an
    axon terminal.
  • This stimulates the release of the
    neurotransmitter acetylcholine or ACh from
    synaptic vesicles.
  • ACh diffuses across the synaptic cleft and
    attaches to ACh receptors on the sarcolemma of a
    muscle fiber this region is known as the motor
    end plate.
  • The ACh receptors open channels on the motor end
    plate which allows Na to diffuse into the muscle
    cell.
  • This change in charge in the muscle cell allows
    for the action potential to continue and move
    deep into the muscle cell via the transverse
    tubules.

25
  • An action potential passes into the muscle cells
    via t-tubules (transverse tubules)
  • This stimulates the release of Ca2 from the
    sarcoplasmic reticulum
  • Ca2 binds to the troponin / tropomyosin complex
    and allows myosin heads to bond to actin and push
    thin filaments toward the center of the sarcomere
  • This process requires ATP

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Contraction of a Skeletal Muscle
  • Muscle fiber contraction is all or none
  • Not all fibers may be stimulated during the same
    interval
  • Different combinations of muscle fiber
    contractions differing responses

28
Graded responses different degrees of skeletal
muscle shortening
29
Types of Graded Response
  • Twitch
  • Single, brief contraction
  • Not a normal muscle function

30
Types of Graded Response
  • Unfused (incomplete) tetanus
  • Some relaxation occurs between contractions
  • The results are summed

31
Types of Graded Response
  • Fused (complete) tetanus
  • No evidence of relaxation before the following
    contractions
  • The result is a sustained muscle contraction

32
Muscle Response to Strong Stimuli
  • Muscle force depends upon the number of fibers
    stimulated
  • More fibers contracting results in greater muscle
    tension
  • Muscles can continue to contract unless they run
    out of energy

33
Types of Muscle Contractions
  • Isotonic contractions
  • Myofilaments are able to slide past each other
    during contractions
  • The muscle shortens
  • Isometric contractions
  • Tension in the muscles increases
  • The muscle is unable to shorten

34
Effects of Exercise on Muscle
  • Aerobic or Endurance
  • result in stronger muscles due to increase blood
    supply
  • Muscle fibers increase mitochondria and oxygen
    storage
  • Muscle becomes more fatigue
  • resistant
  • Heart enlarges to pump
  • more blood to body
  • Does not increase skeletal
  • muscle size

35
Resistance or Isometric Exercises
  • Results of increased muscle use from resistance
    training
  • Individual muscle cells make more contractile
    filaments connective tissue increases
  • Increase in muscle size
  • Increase in muscle strength

36
  • How do all of our muscles get the
  • energy they need for contractions?

37
Energy for Muscle Contractions
  • Initially, muscles used stored ATP for energy
  • Bonds of ATP are broken to release energy
  • Only 4-6 seconds worth of ATP is stored by
    muscles
  • Then, other pathways must be utilized to produce
    ATP

38
1. Direct Phophorylation
  • Muscle cells contain creatine phosphate (CP)
  • After ATP is depleted, ADP is left
  • CP transfers energy to ADP, to regenerate ATP
  • CP supplies are exhausted in about 20 seconds

39
2. Aerobic (Cellular) Respiration
  • Occurs in the mitochondria
  • Glucose is broken down to carbon dioxide and
    water, releasing energy
  • Slower reaction that requires continuous oxygen

40
3. Anaerobic Glycolysis
  • Reaction that breaks down glucose without oxygen
  • Glucose is broken down to pyruvic acid to produce
    some ATP
  • Pyruvic acid is converted to lactic acid
  • Not as efficient, but is fast
  • Huge amounts of glucose are needed
  • Lactic acid produces muscle fatigue

41
  • Muscle Fatigue
  • When a muscle is fatigued, it is unable to
    contract
  • The common reason for muscle fatigue is oxygen
    debt
  • Oxygen must be repaid to tissue
  • Oxygen is required to get rid of accumulated
    lactic acid
  • Increasing acidity (from lactic acid) lack of
    ATP causes the muscle to contract less
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