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Title: Center for Computational Visualization


1
Lecture 8 Multiscale Bio-Modeling and
VisualizationTissue Models I Cardiac Muscle
Models
Chandrajit Bajaj http//www.cs.utexas.edu/bajaj
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Muscle Tissue Types
  • Muscles can be divided into three main groups
    according to their structure
  • Smooth muscle tissue.
  • Skeletal muscle tissue.
  • Cardiac (heart) muscle tissue

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Smooth Muscle
  • Characteristics
  • thin-elongated muscle cells, fibres. Fibres are
    pointed at their ends
  • Each fibre has a single, large, oval nucleus.
  • Each cell is filled with a specialised cytoplasm,
    the sarcoplasm and is surrounded by a thin cell
    membrane, the sarcolemma.
  • Each cell has many myofibrils which lie parallel
    to one another in the direction of the long axis
    of the cell. They are not arranged in a definite
    striped (striated) pattern, as in skeletal
    muscles - hence the name smooth muscle .
  • Interlace to form sheets or layers of muscle
    tissue rather than bundles.
  • Smooth muscle is involuntary tissue. Forms the
    muscle layers in the walls of hollow organs such
    as the digestive tract (lower part of the
    oesophagus, stomach and intestines), the walls of
    the bladder, the uterus, various ducts of glands
    and the walls of blood vessels .
  • Function
  • Smooth muscle controls slow, involuntary
    movements such as the contraction of the smooth
    muscle tissue in the walls of the stomach and
    intestines
  • The muscle of the arteries contracts and relaxes
    to regulate the blood pressure and the flow of
    blood.

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Skeletal (Striated) Muscle
  • Characteristics
  • Most abundant tissue in the vertebrate body.
    Muscles are attached to and bring about the
    movement of the various bones of the skeleton
  • The entire muscle, such as the biceps, is
    enclosed in a sheath of connective tissue, the
    epimysium. This sheath folds inwards into the
    substance of the muscle to surround a large
    number of smaller bundles, the fasciculi.
  • Fasciculi consist of still smaller bundles of
    elongated, cylindrical muscle cells, the fibres.
  • Fibres is a syncytium, i.e. a cell that have many
    nuclei. The nuclei are oval in shaped and are
    found at the periphery of the cell, just beneath
    the thin, elastic membrane (sarcolemma).
  • The sarcoplasm also has many alternating light
    and dark bands, giving the fibre a striped or
    striated appearance (hence the name striated
    muscle).
  • Each muscle fibre is made up of many smaller
    units, the myofibrils.
  • Each myofibril consists of small protein
    filaments, known as actin and myosin filaments.
  • The myosin filaments are slightly thicker and
    make up the dark band (or A-band). The actin
    filaments make up the light bands (I-bands) which
    are situated on either side of the dark band.
  • The actin filaments are attached to the Z-line.
    This arrangement of actin and myosin filaments is
    known as a sacromere.
  • Function
  • functions in pairs to bring about the coordinated
    movements of the limbs,jaws, eyeballs
  • directly involved in the breathing process

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Cardiac Muscle Tissue
  • Characteristics
  • Unique tissue found only in the walls of the
    heart.
  • combination characteristics of smooth muscle and
    some of skeletal muscle tissue. Fibres , like
    those of skeletal muscle, have cross-striations
    and contain numerous nuclei. Like smooth muscle
    tissue, it is involuntary.
  • Differs from striated muscle in the following
    aspects they are shorter, the striations are not
    so obvious, the sarcolemma is thinner and not
    clearly discernible, there is only one nucleus
    present in the centre of each cardiac fibre and
    adjacent fibres branch but are linked to each
    other by muscle bridges. Spaces between different
    fibres are filled with areolar connective tissue
    which contains blood capillaries to supply the
    tissue with the oxygen and nutrients.
  • Function
  • contraction of the atria and ventricles of the
    heart.
  • causes the rhythmical beating of the heart,
    circulating the blood and its contents throughout
    the body as a consequence

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Length-tension relationships in skeletal and
cardiac muscle represents tension developed
during isometric contraction. The physiological
range is the sarcomere length within which the
muscle normally functions.
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Cardiac muscle tissue structure function ?
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1
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The two- and three-dimensional organization of a
sarcomere
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Titin and nebulin Titan spans the distance from
one Z disk to the next M line.
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Changes in a sarcomere during contraction
During contraction the thick and thin filaments
do not change length but slide past each other.
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Excitation-contraction coupling
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Excitation-contraction coupling and relaxation in
cardiac muscle
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Molecular Basis of Contraction
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Regulatory role of tropomyosin and troponin
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Towards Finite Element Models of Sarcomeres
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Quadrilateral Meshing of Circles in 2D
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Algorithm Pipeline for Particle Meshing
Voronoi diagram
Quad Tessellation
Recursive Quad Subdivision
Multi-Linear Centroid Smoothing
Adaptive Quadrilateral Mesh
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Voronoi Computation and Simplification
Cf Imai, Iri, et. al. 1985, Sugihara, Iri et.
al. 1992,
Short Edge Removal and Boxing
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Quad Tesselation of Each Voronoi Cell
Radial and Angular Quad Subdivision
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Adaptive Quad Decomposition via Radial and
Angular Subdivision
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Adaptive Recursive Subdivision MLCS
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Recursive Subdivision (cf Chaitin,
Catmull-Clark)
Limit Curves, and Surface are C2
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Recursive Subdivision with Multi-Linear Centroid
Smoothing (MLCS)
Univariate case the subdivision rule for cubic
B-splines can be expressed as linear subdivision
followed by smoothing with the mask (
). Geometric interpretation of mask reposition
a vertex as the midpoint of the midpoints of the
two segments that contain the vertex. Bivariate
case Bi-cubic subdivision is equivalent to
Bi-linear subdivision followed by smoothing with
the tensor product of the univariate mask with
itself, i.e.

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Multivariate Subdivision I
  • Generalization to MLCS
  • Multi linear Interpolation Centroid smoothing

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MLCS Subdivision II
  • MLCS Subdivision of a cube

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MLCS Subdivision III
  • Hexahedron
  • The hexahedron is a polyhedron with 6 planar
    faces.
  • A hexahedral mesh consists of only the hexahedra

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MLCS Subdivision IV
  • Hexahedral mesh with MLCS

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MLCS Subdivision V
  • MLCS with Creases

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Adaptive Hexahedral Meshing of Particles in 3D
D
C
B
A
G
F
E
H
J
I
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(b)
(a)
(c)
(d)
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(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
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Extra Slides
  • Cardiac musclephysiology

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Human cardiac muscle cells physiology
http//www.bmb.leeds.ac.uk/illingworth/muscle/car
diac
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Control cardiac muscle contraction I
  • The Na/K ATPase or sodium pump (1) works
    continuously, using the energy from ATP to
    maintain a high K concentration inside the cells
    and a high Na concentration in the extracellular
    fluid (ECF). The cell membrane (sarcolemma) is
    usually more permeable to potassium ions than to
    sodium ions, and this gives rise to a membrane
    potential of about 80mV (inside negative) in
    relaxed muscle. Calcium ions are also removed
    from the cytosol into the ECF by an ATP-driven
    calcium pump (2) in all tissues. Cardiac muscle
    possesses an additional sodium/calcium exchange
    protein (3). This export system is driven by the
    pre-existing sodium ion gradient. The calcium
    concentration inside resting cells is low, but
    rises sharply during contractions.
  • The sarcolemma is very thin (about 6 nm) so the
    80mV membrane potential equates to a voltage
    gradient of about 13,000,000 volts per metre! All
    membrane components are subject to intense
    electric fields, and protein conformations are
    greatly influenced by the membrane potential.
    "Voltage gated" ion channels will only conduct
    over a narrow range of membrane potentials,
    whereas "ligand gated" ion channels (such as the
    acetylcholine receptor in voluntary muscle)
    require specific chemical activators.

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Control cardiac muscle contraction II
  • Contraction in cardiac muscle is triggered by a
    wave of membrane depolarisation which spreads
    from neighbouring cells. The change in electric
    field activates voltage gated sodium channels (4)
    in the sarcolemma, each of which allows a few
    hundred positively charged sodium ions to enter
    the negatively charged cytosol, further reducing
    the cardiac membrane potential until the whole
    sarcolemma is depolarised.
  • The sodium channel undergoes a second
    conformational change, as a result of which these
    channels close spontaneously after a few
    milliseconds in all excitable tissues. In cardiac
    muscle, but NOT skeletal muscle, slower
    voltage-gated calcium channels, probably
    identical with dihydropyridine receptors (5) take
    over and maintain a positive inward current for
    several hundred milliseconds (in human ventricle)
    during the plateau phase of the cardiac action
    potential. As in nerves and skeletal muscle, the
    membrane potential in cardiac muscle is
    eventually restored to its resting value by a
    delayed efflux of positive potassium ions from
    the cells.

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Control cardiac muscle contraction III
  • Dihydropyridine drugs (e.g. verapamil
    nifedipine) inhibit calcium entry into heart and
    reduce blood pressure. About 10 of the calcium
    needed to activate cardiac contraction enters
    during each beat from the ECF. This is often
    described as "trigger calcium". The remainder is
    released from the sarcoplasmic reticulum through
    a channel known as the ryanodine receptor (6).
    Ryanodine receptors are widely distributed in the
    body, and are present in non-muscle tissues such
    as the brain. The genes coding for this enormous
    protein (5037 amino acids) have been sequenced.
    Different tissues have their own specific
    isoenzymes. The operation of the ryanodine
    receptor depends in a mysterious way on the flow
    of calcium ions through the dihydropyridine
    receptors in cardiac muscle, but not in other
    muscle types.
  • Calcium ions from both sources bind to the
    regulatory protein troponin-C located in the thin
    filaments (7), leading to a change in filament
    shape. This allows flexible head groups from the
    protein myosin in the thick filaments (8) to
    interact with the protein actin in the thin
    filaments. A change in myosin conformation causes
    the thick and thin filaments to slide against
    each other and hydrolyse ATP, which provides the
    energy for contraction. Movement and ATP
    hydrolysis continue until the calcium ions are
    removed from the cytosol at the end of each
    contraction. Most of the calcium ions are
    returned to the sarcoplasmic reticulum by a
    calcium pump (9) but about 10 leave the cell via
    proteins (2) and (3) described above. Calcium
    ions are stored within the sarcoplasmic reticulum
    loosely bound to a protein, calsequestrin (10).

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Control cardiac muscle contraction IV
  • In cardiac muscle circulating hormones like
    catecholamines and glucagon bind to specific
    receptors (11) on the outer surface of the
    sarcolemma, changing their shape. This change is
    communicated via G-proteins (12) within the
    sarcolemma to adenyl cyclase (13) bound to the
    internal face of the sarcolemma. Several
    G-proteins are known, some activatory, others
    inhibitory. They all slowly hydrolyse GTP while
    working, although it is not clear what advantage
    this confers on the cell. Adenyl cyclase
    manufactures 3'5' cyclic AMP, which is
    continuously destroyed by a phosphodiesterase
    enzyme. The steady-state concentration of cyclic
    AMP depends on the balance between synthesis and
    degradation. Cyclic AMP in turn controls the
    activity of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase.
    This enzyme phosphorylates several of the
    proteins involved in the contraction process, and
    temporarily alters their properties until a
    protein phosphatase restores the status quo ante
    by removing the phosphate group.
  • The sodium pump (1) is activated by
    phosphorylation, which allows it to handle the
    increased ion traffic across the sarcolemma when
    cardiac work output rises.
  • The dihydropyridine receptor (5) is activated by
    phosphorylation, increasing calcium entry into
    the cells. The ryanodine receptor (6) is also
    activated, increasing the rate of calcium release
    from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. The troponin-I
    component in the thin filaments (7) is
    phosphorylated and this reduces calcium binding
    to the neighbouring troponin-C. (This may be a
    defence mechanism preventing tetany in cardiac
    muscle, which would be rapidly fatal.)

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Control cardiac muscle contraction V
  • A small protein called phospholamban associated
    with the sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium pump (9)
    is phosphorylated, and this accelerates calcium
    uptake by the S.R. pump. (A fast heart rate
    requires quick relaxation as well as rapid
    contraction.)
  • The enzymes triglyceride lipase (14) and glycogen
    phosphorylase (15) are activated by
    phosphorylation. These enzymes catalyse the first
    steps in the mobilisation of food reserves. They
    eventually increase the supply of ATP and provide
    the energy for the anticipated extra work.
  • These changes take place in a coordinated
    sequence over many seconds, so that the initial
    response to adrenalin may be a pounding heart,
    but both the rate and the force of contraction
    tend to return to normal when the stimulation is
    prolonged.

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Modulation of cardiac contraction by
catecholamines
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Action potential of a cardiac contractile cell
The phase numbers are a convention.
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Refractory periods and summation in skeletal and
cardiac muscle
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Action potentials in cardiac autorhythmic cells
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