Title: The%20Neuromuscular%20Junction%20(%20Neuromuscular%20Synapse%20)
1The Neuromuscular Junction( Neuromuscular
Synapse )
2- Anterior Horn Cells ( Motor Neurons ).
3- Motor Unit is the motor neuron (Anterior horn
Cell) and all the muscle fibers it supplies
4Neuromuscular Junction (NMJ)
5The Neuromuscular junction consists of
- A/ Axon Terminal contains
- around 300,000 vesicles which
- contain the neurotransmitter
- acetylcholine (Ach).
- B/ Synaptic Cleft
- 20 30 nm ( nanometer ) space
- between the axon terminal the
- muscle cell membrane. It contains
- the enzyme cholinesterase which
- can destroy Ach .
- C/ Synaptic Gutter ( Synaptic Trough)
- It is the muscle cell membrane
- which is in contact with the
- nerve terminal . It has many folds
- called Subneural Clefts , which
- greatly increase the surface area ,
- allowing for accomodation of large
- numbers of Ach receptors . Ach
- receptors are located here .
6The Neuromuscular junction consists of
- The entire structure of axon terminal , synaptic
cleft and synaptic gutter is called Motor
End-Plate . - Ach is synthesized locally in the cytoplasm of
the nerve terminal , from active acetate
(acetylcoenzyme A) and choline. - Then it is rapidly absorbed into the synaptic
vesicles and - stored there.
- The synaptic vesicles themselves are made by the
Golgi Apparatus in the nerve soma ( cell-body). - Then they are carried by Axoplasmic Transport to
the nerve terminal , which contains around
300,000 vesicles .
7Acetylcholine (1)
- Ach is synthesized locally in the cytoplasm of
the nerve terminal , from active acetate
(acetylcoenzyme A) and choline. - Then it is rapidly absorbed into the synaptic
vesicles and - stored there.
- The synaptic vesicles themselves are made by the
Golgi Apparatus in the nerve soma ( cell-body). - Then they are carried by Axoplasmic Transport to
the nerve terminal , which contains around
300,000 vesicles . - Each vesicle is then filled with around 10,000
Ach molecules .
8Acetylcholine (2)
- When a nerve impulse reaches the nerve terminal ,
- it opens calcium channels ?
- calcium diffuses from the ECF int the axon
terminal ? Ca releases Ach from vesicles by a
process of EXOCYTOSIS - One nerve impulse can release 125 Ach vesicles.
- The quantity of Ach released by one nerve impulse
is more than enough to produce one End-Plate
Potential .
9- Ach combines with its receptors in the subneural
clefts. This opens sodium channels ? sodium
diffuses into the muscle causing a
local,non-propagated potential called the
End-Plate Potential (EPP), whose value is 50
75 mV. - This EPP triggers a muscle AP which spreads down
inside the muscle to make it cntract .
10- After ACh acts on the receptors , it is
hydrolyzed by the enzyme Acetylcholinesterase
(cholinesterase ) into Acetate Choline . The
Choline is actively reabsorbed into the nerve
terminal to be used again to form ACh. This whole
process of Ach release, action destruction
takes about 5-10 ms .
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12Myasthenia Gravis
- Auto-immune disease
- Antibodies against Ach receptors destroy many of
the receptors ? decreasing the EPP , or even
preventing its formation ? weakness or paralysis
of muscles - ( depending on the severity of the disease )
. - ? patient may die because of paralysis of
respiratory muscles. - Treatment Anti-cholinestersae drugs . These
drugs inactivate the cholinesterase enzyme (
which destroys Ach) and thereby allow relatively
large amounts of Ach to accumulate and act on the
remaining healthy receptors ? good EPP is formed
? muscle contraction .
13Drugs Acting on the NMJ
- Drugs that stimulate the muscle cell by
Acetylcholine-like action nicotine ,
methacholine , carbachol . - Drugs that block neuromuscular transmission
Curare and curare-like drugs ( curariform drugs )
. They have a chemical structure similar to ACh ,
but can not stimulate the receptors . They occupy
acetylcholine receptors and thereby prevent ACh
from acting on its receptors ? muscle weakness or
paralysis . Example Tubocurarine. It is used
during some surgical operations . - Anticholinesterase drugs ( e.g.
Neostigmine,Physostigmine) Used in treatment of
Myasthenia Gravis . These drugs inactivate the
cholinesterase enzyme ( which destroys Ach) and
thereby allow relatively large amounts of Ach to
accumulate and act on the remaining healthy
receptors ? good EPP is formed ? muscle
contraction .
14Muscle Physiology
15The Muscle Action Potential
- Muscle RMP -90 mV ( same as in nerves ) .
- Duration of AP 1-5 ms ( longer duration than
nerve AP , which is usually about 1 ms ) . - CV 3-5 m/s ( slower than big nerves ) .
16Muscle Contraction
- There are 4 important muscle proteins
- A/ two contractile proteins that slide upon each
other during contraction - Actin
- Myosin ,
- B/ And two regulatory proteins
- Troponin ? excitatory to contraction
- Tropomyosin ? inhibitory to contraction
17- Each muscle cell (fiber) is 10 -80 micrometer
long is covered by a cell-membrane called
Sarcolemma. - Each cell contains between a few hundreds to a
few thousands Myofibrils. - Each Myofibril contains 3000 Actin filaments
1500 Myosin filaments . - Each myofibril is striated consisting of dark
bands (called A-bands) and - light (I-bands).
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19Muscle Structure (2)
- A-bands consist mainly of Myosin Actin while
- I-bands consist of Actin.
- The ends of Actin are attached byZ-Discs(Z-lines
). - The part of the Myofibril lying between two
Z-discs is called Sarcomere . It is about 2
mcrometers . - When contraction takes place Actin Myosin slide
upon each other , the distance between two
z-discs decreases This is called Sliding
Filament Mechanism -
20Sliding Filament Mechanism will be discussed
later )
21Actin Filament consists of Globular G-actin
molecules that are attached together to form a
chain. Each two chains wind together?like a
double helix
Two F-Actin strands
Groove between the 2 F-actin strands
22gt Each G-Actin molecule has a binding site for
Myosin head( called actin active sites ) gt
These active sites are covered and hidden from
the Myosin head by the inhibitory protein
Tropomyosin gt When Troponin is activated by Ca
it will move the Tropomyosin away from these
sites and expose them for Myosin.gt then myosin
immediately gets attached to them .gt when the
myosin head attaches to actin it forms a
cross-bridge
23The diagram of Guyton
24Myosin (1)
- Each Myosin molecule has (1) Head (2) Hinge
(joint ) and ( 3 ) Tail and each myosin head
contains an ATP binding site as well as ATP-ase
enzyme .
25Myosin (2)
- Each 200 myosin molecules aggregate to form a
myosin filament , from the sides of which project
myosin heads in all directions .
26- The EPP at the motor end-plate triggers a muscle
AP - The muscle AP spreads down inside the muscle
through the Transverse Tubules ( T-tubules ) - to reach the Sarcoplasmic Reticulum (SR) .
- In the SR the muscle AP opens calcium channels
- ( in the walls of the SR) ? calcium passively
flows out ( by concentration gradient ) of the SR
into muscle cytoplasm? Ca combines with
Troponin
27The activated troponin pulls the inhibitory
protein tropomyosin away from the myosin binding
sites on actin ? and once these sites on Actin
are exposed ? myosin heads quickly bind to them
28This binding activates the enzyme ATPase in the
Myosin Head ? it breaks down ATP releasing energy
? which is used in the Power Stroke to move
the myosin head
29The power stroke means tilting of the
cross-bridge head ( myosin head ) and dragging (
pulling ) of actin filament
30- Then , on order to release the head of Myosin
from Actin , a new ATP is needed to come and
combine with the head of Myosin . - Q What is Rigor Mortis ?
- Q ATP is neede for 3 things what are they ?
- Q Is muscle relaxation a passive or active
process ? Why ? - Q What happens to A-band and I-band during
contraction ? - Q Ca is needed in nerve muscle when and
where ?
31Summary (1)
- Muscle AP spreads through T-tubules
- it reaches the sarcoplasmic reticulum where ?
opens its Ca channels ? calcium diffuses out of
the sarcoplasmic reticulum into the cytoplasm ?
increased Ca concentration in the myofibrillar
fluid . - Ca combines with Troponin , activating it
- Troponin pulls away Tropomyosin
- This uncovers the active sites in Actin for
Myosin - Myosin combines with these sites
- This causes breakdown of ATP and release of
snergy which will be used in Power Stroke - Myosin and Actin slide upon each other ?
contraction - A new ATP comes and combines with the Myosin head
.This causes detachment of Myosin from Actin .
32Summary (2)
- ATP is needed for 3 things
- (1) Power stroke .
- (2) Detachment of myosin from actin active sites
. - (3) Pumping C back into the Sarcoplasmic
reticulum .
33Cardiac Muscle (1)
- Cardiac muscle is a type of highly oxidative
(using molecular oxygen to generate energy )
involuntary striated muscle found in the walls of
the heart, - Cardiac muscle is adapted to be highly resistant
to fatigue it has a large number of
mitochondria, enabling continuous aerobic
respiration via oxidative phosphorylation, - Role of calcium in contraction
- In contrast to skeletal muscle, cardiac muscle
requires both extracellular calcium and sodium
ions for contraction to occur. -
34Cardiac Muscle (2)
- Like skeletal muscle, the depolarization phase of
the ventricular muscle action potential is due to
entry of sodium ions across into the cell . - However, an inward flux ( influx ) of
extracellular calcium ions through calcium
channels sustains the depolarization of cardiac
muscle cells for a longer duration , resulting in
a plateau Phase that is not present in the
case of the skeletal muscle AP - Therefore , the cardiac muscle AP lasts for a
long period ( 200-2300 ms ) and covers most of
the contraction phase . That is why cardiac
muscle can not be tetanized . - Repolarization in the AP , like skeletal muscle ,
is due to potassium efflux .
35Phases of the Cardiac Muscle AP (1)
- Phase 4
- Phase 4 is the Resting Membrane Potential .
- The normal resting membrane potential in the
ventricular myocardium is about -85 to -95 mV. - This is the period that the cell remains in until
it is stimulated by an external electrical
stimulus (typically an adjacent cell). - This phase of the action potential is associated
with diastole ( relaxation ) of the chamber of
the heart
36Phases of the Cardiac Muscle AP (2)
- Phase 0
- Phase 0 is the rapid depolarization
- Phase 1
- Phase 1 of the action potential occurs with the
inactivation of the sodium channels .
37Phases of the Cardiac Muscle AP (3)
- Phase 2
- Phase 2 is the "plateau" phase of the cardiac AP
and is due to calcium influx into the cell . - Phase 3
- Phase 3 is the repolarization phase and is due to
potassium efflux
38- Draw the relationship between a cardiac AP and
cardiac muscle contraction. How does this
situation compare to excitation contraction
coupling of skeletal muscle? - In skeletal muscle, the electrical event is over
before the contraction begins, - but in cardiac muscle, the electrical and
mechanical events overlap considerably. - Tetany is not possible in cardiac muscle because
of the prolonged refractory period.