Title: The Muscular and Skeletal Systems
1The Muscular and Skeletal Systems
- Starr/McMillans
- Human Biology
- Fourth Edition Chapter 5
- Third Edition Chapter 4
2Fig. 5.2, p. 89
3Row, Row, Row Your Boat
- The McCagg sisters have genetically determined
characteristics (tall bodies, long thigh bones)
that contribute to their amazing rowing ability. - But they must also endure rigorous training to
develop the bone and muscle mass that is
necessary for their sport.
Fig. 5.1, p. 88
4Functions of Bone
- Movement
- Protection
- Support
- Mineral storage
- Blood cell formation
5Basic Bone Functions and Structure
- The bones are moved by muscles thus the whole
body is movable. - Bones protect vital organs such as brain and
lungs. - The bones support and anchor muscles.
6Key Concepts
- Bone tissue acts as a depository for calcium,
phosphorus, and other ions. - Parts of some bones are sites of blood cell
production. - There are four types of bones long (arms), short
(wrist), flat (skull), and irregular (vertebrae). - Bone is a connective tissue with living cells
(osteocytes) and collagen fibers distributed
throughout a ground substance that is hardened by
calcium salts.
7Bone Development
- How Do Bones Develop?
- Osteoblasts secrete material inside the shaft of
the cartilage model of long bones. - Calcium is deposited cavities merge to form the
marrow cavity. - Eventually osteoblasts become trapped within
their own secretions and become osteocytes
(mature bone cells). - In growing children, the epiphyses (ends of bone)
are separated from the shaft by an epiphyseal
plate (cartilage) which continues to grow under
the influence of growth hormone until late
adolescence.
8How the Skeleton Grows and Is Maintained
- How Bone Remodeling Works
- Bone is renewed constantly as minerals are
deposited (by osteoblasts) and withdrawn (by
osteoclasts) during the "remodeling" process. - Bone turnover helps to maintain calcium levels
for the entire body. - Parathyroid hormone causes bone cells to release
enzymes that will dissolve bone tissue and
release calcium to the interstitial fluid and
blood calcitonin stimulates the reverse. - Watch Broken Bone Video
9How the Skeleton Grows and Is Maintained
- Bone Remodeling Over Time
- Before adulthood, bone turnover is especially
important in increasing the diameter of certain
bones. - Osteoporosis (decreased bone density) is
associated with decreases in osteoblast activity,
sex hormone production, exercise, and calcium
uptake.
10Overview of the Skeleton
- The 206 bones of a human are arranged in two
major divisions (axial and appendicular). - Bones are attached to bones by ligaments bones
are connected to muscles by tendons.
11Joints
- Synovial joints are the most common and move
freely they include the ball-and-socket joints
of the hips and the hingelike joints such as the
knee.
- They are stabilized by ligaments.
- A capsule of dense connective tissue surrounds
the bones of the joint. - The capsule produces synovial fluid that
lubricates the joint.
12Arthritis
- In osteoarthritis, the cartilage at the end of
the bone degenerates. - In rheumatoid arthritis, the synovial membrane
becomes inflamed, the cartilage degenerates, and
bone is deposited into the joint.
13- Cartilaginous joints (such as between the
vertebrae ) have no gap, but are held together by
cartilage and can move only a little.
cervical vertebrae (7)
thoracic vertebrae (12)
intervertebral disks
lumbar vertebrae (5)
sacrum (5 fused)
coccyx (4 fused)
Fig. 5.8, p. 95
14Fibrous joints also have no gap between the bones
and hardly move flat cranial bones are an
example.
Fig. 5.7a, p. 94-95
15Science Comes to Life Replacing Joints
Artificial Knee Joint
patella
femur
tibia
Fig. 5.12, p. 99
16TRICEPS BRACHII
BICEPS BRACHII
PECTORALIS MAJOR
DELTOID
TRAPEZIUS
SERRATUS ANTERIOR
EXTERNAL OBLIQUE
LATISSIMUS DORSI
RECTUS ABDOMINUS
GLUTEUS MAXIMUS
ADDUCTOR LONGUS
BICEPS FEMORIS
SARTORIUS
QUADRICEPS FEMORIS
GASTROCNEMIUS
TABIALIS ANTERIOR
Fig. 5.15, p. 101
17The Muscular System
- All types of muscle are capable of contracting in
response to stimulation and returning to the
original resting position. - Skeletal muscle responds to nervous system
signals and interacts with the skeleton to cause
movement. - Cardiac (heart) muscle contracts intrinsically.
- Smooth muscle (intestine) responds to stimulation
by nerves, hormones, and can contract
intrinsically.
18Skeletal Muscles and Bones Interact
- The human body's skeletal muscles (600 of them)
are arranged in pairs or groups. - The origin end of the muscle is designated as
being attached to the bone that moves relatively
little whereas, the insertion is attached to the
bone that moves the most. - Because most muscle attachments are located close
to joints, only a small contraction is needed to
produce considerable movement of some body part
(leverage advantage). Some work together
synergistically others operate antagonistically. - Reciprocal innervation dictates that only one
muscle of an antagonistic pair (e.g. biceps and
triceps) can be stimulated at a time.
19Antagonistic Muscles
Triceps contracts
Biceps contracts
Biceps relaxes
Triceps relaxes
20A Closer Look at Muscles
outer sheath of connective tissue
bundles of muscle cells each surrounded by
connective tissue
one muscle cell
one myofibril
Fig. 5.16a, p. 102
See next slide
21- Muscles are composed of individual muscle cells
(fibers), each of which is composed of many
myofibrils, divided into contractile units called
sarcomeres - Z lines mark sarcomere ends
-
myofibril
Z band
Z band
Z band
22- Myofibrils are composed of thin (actin), and
thick (myosin) filaments. - Each actin filament is actually two beaded
strands of protein twisted together.
- Each myosin filament is a protein with a head
(projecting outward) and a long tail (which is
bound together with others).
23Sliding Filament Model of Contraction
Within each sarcomere there are two sets of actin
filaments, which are attached on opposite sides
of the sarcomere myosin filaments lie suspended
between the actin filaments. During contraction,
the myosin filaments physically slide along and
pull the two sets of actin filaments toward each
other at the center of the sarcomere this is
called the sliding-filament mechanism of
contraction.
relaxed
contracted
24sliding-filament model
- Cross-bridges form between the heads of myosin
molecules and actin filaments. - When a myosin head is energized, it attaches to
an adjacent actin filament and tilts in a power
stroke toward the sarcomere's center. - Energy from ATP drives the power stroke as the
heads pull the actin filaments along.
25sliding-filament model
- After the power stroke the myosin heads detach
and prepare for another attachment (power
stroke). - ATP supplies the energy for both attachment and
detachment. - A single contraction involves multiple power
strokes. - At death, there is no ATP to cause the heads to
detach, and the body enters rigor mortis. Stiff
26Control of Muscle Contraction
- Skeletal muscles contract in response to signals
from the nervous system that trigger action
potentials along the plasma membrane and into the
interior of the muscle cell.
27Control of Muscle Contraction
- Eventually the signal reaches the sarcoplasmic
reticulum (internal tubes), which responds by
releasing stored calcium ions that will bind to
troponin, which is associated with another
protein, tropomyosin, both of which are parts of
the actin filaments.
Sarcoplasmic reticulum
T tubule
Z band
Z band
28- When calcium binds to troponin, the conformation
of actin changes allowing myosin cross-bridges to
form. - When nervous stimulation stops, calcium ions are
actively taken up by the sarcoplasmic reticulum
and the changes in filament conformation are
reversed the muscle relaxes.
29Junctions Between Nerves and Muscles
- At neuromuscular junctions impulses from the
branched endings of motor neurons pass to the
muscle cell membranes by acetylcholine. - When the neuron is stimulated, calcium channels
open allow calcium ions to flow inward, causing a
release of acetylcholine into the synapse.
30Sources of Energy for Contraction
- During periods (few seconds) of intense muscle
activity, creatine phosphate is the source of
phosphate to remake ATP. - During intense and prolonged muscle action,
anaerobic lactate fermentation produces low
amounts of ATP and leads to a buildup of lactate. - When muscle action is moderate, most of the ATP
is provided by aerobic electron transport
phosphorylation, which is dependent on oxygen
supply and number of mitochondria present.
31Properties of Whole Muscles
- Muscle Tension
- The cross-bridges that form during contraction
exert muscle tensiona mechanical force that can
perform work. - An isometrically contracting muscle develops
tension but does not shorten. - An isotonically contracting muscle shortens and
moves a load.
32How Motor Units Function
- A single, brief stimulus to a motor unit causes a
brief contraction called a muscle twitch. - A second stimulus that quickly follows the first
results in temporal summation. - Repeated stimulation without sufficient interval
causes a sustained contraction called tetany
33time
latent period
1 twitch
strength of contraction
relaxation phase
contraction phase
stimulus
time
4 twitches
1
2
3
4
stimuli (arrows)
6 twitches
1
2
3
4
5
6
tetanic contraction
tetanus
Fig. 5.22, p. 107
twitch
10
20
30
34
34How Motor Units Function
- Individual muscle cells contract according to the
all-or-none principle. - The number of motor units that are activated
determines the strength of the contraction Small
number of units weak contraction large number
at greater frequency stronger contraction. - Muscle tone is the continued steady, low-level of
contraction that stabilizes joints and maintains
general health.
35"Fast" and "Slow" Muscle
- Humans have two general types of skeletal muscle
cells - "Slow" muscle is more red in color due to
myoglobin and blood capillaries its contractions
are slower but more sustained. - "Fast" or "white" muscle cells contain fewer
mitochondria and less myoglobin but can contract
rapidly and powerfully for short periods. - When athletes train, one goal is to increase the
relative size and contractile strength of fast
(sprinters) and slow (distance swimmers) muscle
fibers.