Title: Muscle Physiology
1Chapter 6
2- Use the terminology associated with the
musculature system - Learn about the following
- Different types of muscle cells
- Muscle tissue development
- Gross and fine muscle structure
- Gross muscle function
- Muscle cell physiology
- Muscle types and actions
- Muscle development and growth
- Understand the aging and pathology of the
musculature
Chapter 6 The Muscular System
3Overview
Muscle cells change their shape by shortening
along one or more planes this is also called
contraction. Over half the bodys mass is
composed of muscle tissue, and over 90 of this
muscle tissue is involved in skeletal movement.
Chapter 6 The Muscular System
4Functions of the Muscular System
- Moves the skeletal system
- Passes food through the digestive system
- Helps in dilation and constriction of blood
vessels - Helps in movement of air in and out of lungs
- Helps with movement of urine out of the bladder.
- Pumping blood throughout the body
5Muscle Tissue
- Muscle is composed of contractile cells.
- Contractile cells can change their shape.
- Over half of the bodys mass is composed of
muscle tissue. - 90 of this muscle tissue is involved in skeletal
movement. - The rest would be used in cardiac tissue (the
heart) and smooth muscle tissue (the digestive
organs and circulatory system)
6Muscle Tissue
- Contractile cells have high energy needs.
- So they need a lot of blood supply.
- Blood supplies muscles (contractile cells) with
- Glucose
- Oxygen
- Electrolytes-ions essential for muscle
contractions - Blood removes large amounts of metabolic wastes.
- Muscles along with nervous tissue consume almost
70 of the food energy taken into the body every
day. - Like the skeletal system muscle consumes a lot of
calcium - Body Mass Index (BMI) is an indirct measure of
body density.
7Muscle
- Three types of muscle are found in the human
body - Smooth muscle
- Cardiac muscle
- Skeletal muscle
Chapter 6 The Muscular System
8Skeletal Muscle
- Long cylindrical cells
- Many nuclei per cell because several myoblasts
are fused together - Striated
- Voluntary
- Rapid contractions
9Cardiac Muscle
- Branching cells
- One or two nuclei per cell
- Striated
- Involuntary
- Medium speed contractions
10Smooth Muscle
- One nucleus per cell
- Nonstriated
- Involuntary
- Slow, wave-like
- Contractions
- Location lining of blood
- vessels, digestive organs,
- urinary system
11Skeletal Muscle Structure
- 1st level- Most basic -the muscle fiber or cell
- Each muscle fiber is covered with a connective
layer called the endomysium. - 2nd level- Bundles of muscle cells are called
fascicles (fasciculi) - Perimysium-a thin connective tissue covering that
surrounds each fascicle. - 3rd and highest organ level of skeletal muscle
structure Epimysium-a fibrous connective tissue
that covers the gross muscle and also the tendons
that attach muscle to bone and skin.
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13Development of Muscle tissue
- Myogenesis- process of muscle tissue developing
from mesoderm cells. - Myoblasts- stem cells that form muscle tissue.
- Growth factors-are chemicals that act as signals
to initiate cell division and differentiation of
muscle tissue. - Over a dozen genes involved in muscle cell
development.
14Muscle Cell Structure
- Skeletal muscle cells are long, cylindrical cells
covered with an excitable membrane and filled
with a specialized cytoskeleton. - Sarcolemma-membrane of muscle cells
- Sarcoplasm- cytoplasm of muscle cells
- Cytoskeleton is located in the sarcoplasm --
- Cytoskeleton is composed of bands of proteins
called myofilaments. - Three types of myofilaments
- Thick- composed of myosin
- Thin- composed of actin (majority), wrapped
around a length of tropomyosin, and speckled on
the coils of the actin are small proteins called
troponin. - Vertical- composed of the protein titin, it is
considered an elastic myofilament. -
15Structure of the muscle fiber (muscle cell)
- Myofibrils-long cords of myofilaments (bands of
proteins making up the cytoskeleton) that form
parallel bundles that comprise most of a muscle
cells interior. - Sarcomere-the contractile unit of a muscle cell.
(These chains of sarcomeres form myofibrils). - Muscle cell (fiber)-is made up of many bundled
myofibrils that run parallel to one another for
the length of the cell. - Thick and thin myofilaments arrange to form an
overlapping pattern within a sarcomere. - The thin myofilaments (actin) are attached to a
protein structure called the Z-line. - The thick myofilaments (myosin) seem to be
floating between the rungs of the thin
myofilaments, but they are held in place by
invisible titin filament that attaches them to
Z-line.
16Microanatomy of Skeletal Muscle
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20Muscle Cell Structure
- Z-line
- Function
- To keep the thick and thin filaments aligned.
- To help control the stretch and recoil limits in
a muscle. - Serves a role in muscle contractions.
- It anchors the sarcomeres to the sarcolemma.
- Any movement of the Z-line changes the length of
the muscle. - Sarcoplasmic reticulum
- Function
- A system of inner membrane tubes that store and
transport - large amounts of calcium needed for muscle
contraction.
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24H Band
25Sarcomere Relaxed
26Sarcomere Partially Contracted
27Sarcomere Completely Contracted
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29Muscle cell contraction
- Simultaneous shortening of all the sarcomeres
within a cell. - Three stages
- Neural stimulation
- Muscle cell contraction
- Muscle cell relaxation
- Neural stimulation
- Takes place at neuromuscular junction
- Contraction is initiated when end of nerve cell
releases neurotransmitter - Neurotransmitter is acetylcholine which binds to
receptors in sarcolemma - This causes changes in sarcolemma and allows
transport of ions across - the membrane
- Sodium ions flow into the muscle cell and
potassium flows out of the cell - Causes sarcoplsmic reticulum to release calcium
- The flow of calcium initiates the muscle
contraction phase.
30Muscle cell contraction
- Muscle cell contraction
- Calcium binds to troponin on actin myofilamentts
- This causes binding site to open up so that
myosin can bind to actin - Also activates the attachment of ATP to myosin
- ATP provides energy for myosin head to swivel and
hook on to the binding - site on actin
- The swivel movement brings the two Z lines closer
together - This shortens the sarcomere
- The complete contraction of a muscle cell
requires several cycle of neural - stimulation and contraction phases.
- Muscle cell relaxation
- This begins when there is no more neural
stimulations - The sodium and potassium levels are back like
they were originally - The sarcoplasmic reticulum has recovered most of
the calcium - This causes a release of the myosin heads from
actin - There is no mechanism within the muscle cell for
lengthening the sarcomere - The muscle cell remains contracted
- The muscle is fully recovered when a body
movement causes the sarcomere - to stretch.
31- Rigor mortis
- Causes when calcium leaks out of the SR into the
sarcomere. - This is common after death
- Eventually, muscle cell structures begin to decay
- Causing muscles to become soft and loose
- Other factors that ensure adequate muscle
contractions - Having creatine phosphate present
- It is a molecule that stores energy in muscle
cells - It collects energy from ATP and can store energy
for long periods of time. - It then transfers energy back to ATP when muscle
contractions require energy - Having Glycogen present it is a stored form of
glucose, important source of - energy reserve for muscle action
- Having Myoglobin present
- It is a red colored chemical that stores oxygen
for certain muscle cells. - Having oxygen in muscle cells permits them to
provide large amounts of ATP - during continuous or heavy work
32Neuromuscular Junction
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34Neuromuscular Junction
- Axon of motor junction 3. Muscle fiber
- 2. Neuromuscular junction 4. Myofibril
35Neuromuscular Junction
- Presynaptic terminal 3. Synaptic vesicles
- 2. Postsynaptic terminal 4. Synaptic cleft
- (sarcolemma) 5. Mitochondria
36Acetylcholine Opens Na Channel
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38Muscle Contraction Summary
- Nerve impulse reaches myoneural junction
- Acetylcholine is released from motor neuron
- Ach binds with receptors in the muscle membrane
to allow sodium to enter - Sodium influx will generate an action potential
in the sarcolemma
39ATP
40Creatine
- Molecule capable of storing ATP energy
41Creatine Phosphate
- Molecule with stored ATP energy
Creatine phosphate ADP
42Human Skeletal Muscles