Title: Chapter 9 The Muscular System
1 Chapter 9The Muscular System
2Skeletal Muscle Structure
- Tendon connect
- muscle to bone
- Fascia outermost
- covering covers entire muscle continuous
- w/tendon separates
- muscle from adjacent
- muscles
- Aponeuroses- connect muscle to
- muscle
3Skeletal Muscle Structure
- Coverings
- Epimysium covers entire muscle
- (under fascia)
- Perimysium covers
- muscle bundle (fascicle)
- Endomysium
- covers each fiber (cell)
- Sarcolemma cell
- membrane
4Skeletal Muscle Structure Cont.
Skeletal Muscle Structure
- Sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) channels for
transport - Myofibrils threads that compose muscle fibers
contain protein filaments - 1. actin thin
- 2. myosin thick
5Skeletal Muscle Structure
6Muscle Fiber (muscle cell)
- Cisternae of SR
- enlarged portions
- Transverse tubules
- (T-tubules)
- important
- in muscle contraction
- Sarcoplasm cytoplasm
7Breakdown of Skeletal Muscle
8Parts of a Sarcomere (functional unit of a muscle)
9Parts of a Sarcomere
- Z lines end points
- M line middle
- I band on either
- side of Z line actin
- filaments only
- H zone on either
- side of M line
- myosin filaments only
- A band overlapping
- actin myosin filaments
10Parts of a Sarcomere
11Neuromuscular Junction junction b/t motor
neuron muscle
- Motor neuron carries
- impulse from brain or
- spinal cord
- to muscle
- Motor end plate end
- of muscle fiber many
- nuclei mitochon-
- dria located here
12Neuromuscular Junction
- Neurotransmitters
- (ntm) chemicals that
- help carry impulses
- Motor unit 1 motor
- neuron fibers that
- it stimulates
- Synaptic vesicles
- store neurotransmitter
- most common acetylcholine (ACh)
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14Electron Micrograph Neuromuscular Junction
15Neuromuscular Junction Animation
- Neuromuscular Junction Animation
164 Proteins in Muscle Cells
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18Troponin Tropomyosin
- 4 proteins are found in muscle cells actin,
myosin, troponin tropomyosin - troponin appear
- as globules provide
- a binding site for Ca²
- tropomyosin
- appear as ribbons
- cover the myosin
- cross-bridge
- binding sites in a
- relaxed muscle
-
-
-
19Sliding Filament Theory (How Muscles Contract)
- Muscle fiber stimulated by release of ACh from
synaptic vesicles of neuron - ACh causes impulse to travel to muscle cell
membrane - Transverse tubules (T-tubules) carry impulse deep
into muscle fibers - Sarcoplasmic reticulum releases Ca ions (Ca²)
- Ca² bind to troponin, tropomyosin moves,
exposing binding sites on actin filaments
20Cross Bridge Animation
21Sliding Filament Theory (How Muscles Contract )
- Linkages form b/t actin myosin
- Actin filaments move inward, shortening the
sarcomere - Muscle fiber relaxes when Ca² are transported
back to S.R. - The enzyme cholinesterase (or AChesterase)
decomposes ACh
22Sliding Filament Theory
- Relaxed muscle binding sites on actin are
covered by tropomyosin
23Sliding Filament Theory
- Ca² binds to troponin
- Tropomyosin
- slides out of the way
- Myosin binds to actin
- pulls inward
- Sarcomeres
- shorten muscle
- contracts
24Sliding Filament Animation
- sliding filament animation
25Sliding Filament Theory
26Energy for Muscle Contraction
- ATP (adenosine triphosphate)
- provides the energy for muscle contraction
- When ATP is converted to ADP (adenosine
diphosphate) by losing the last phosphate,
energy is released. -
27Energy for Muscle Contraction
- Cells depend on cellular respiration
- of glucose to synthesize ATP
-
- An additional source is creatine phosphate
28Energy for Muscle Contraction
- Creatine phosphate stores excess energy
- Can be used to convert ADP back into ATP
- Anaerobic respiration (in the absence of O2)
provides few ATPs, while aerobic resp. (in the
presence of O2) provides many ATPs
29Creatine Phosphate
High amts. of ATP - ATP is used to Low
amts. of ATP CP is used synthesize CP, which
stores energy to resynthesize ATP. for
later use.
30Importance of Myoglobin
- l.a. carried by blood to
- liver liver can convert
- l.a. to glucose, but
- requires ATP (ATP being
- used for muscle contraction)
- myoglobin stores O2
- in muscle cells gives
- muscle its red color
31 Aerobic vs. Anaerobic Respiration
32Aerobic vs. Anaerobic Respiration
-
- Carried by
blood to liver liver
can convert l.a. to glucose, but
requires ATP (ATP being used for
muscle contraction) - Imp. b/c blood supply
- during muscle contr.
- may decrease
-
- As l.a.
accumulates, O2 debt occurs
33 Oxygen Debt
- Strenuous exercise leads to O2 deficiency
lactic acid buildup - ATP provides energy for muscle contraction
- Amt. of O2 needed to convert accumulated l.a. to
glucose restore ATP levels O2 debt - L.A. accumulation leads to muscle fatigue b/c pH
of muscle cell is lowered muscle cannot contract
34Muscle Cramp
- Muscle cramp fatigued muscle has lack of ATP
needed to move Ca² back into S.R. cross
bridges not broken - Rigor mortis takes up to 72 hrs. to occur
sarcolemma becomes more permeable to Ca² ATP
levels insufficient
35Myogram
- Pattern or graph of
- a muscle contraction
- A single contraction is
- called a muscle twitch
- 3 parts
- Latent (lag) phase
- brief pd. of delay
- b/t when the stimulus is applied actual
contraction occurs - Contraction
- Relaxation return to
- original state
36 Patterns of Contraction
- a) Muscle Twitch
- single contraction
- b) Staircase Effect
- many stimuli closely
- spaced w/complete
- relaxation in b/t each
- contraction generate
- incr. force
37Patterns of Contraction
- c) Summation when
- the 2nd stimulus occurs
- during the relaxation
- pd. of 1st contr. the
- 2nd contr. generates
- more force
- d) Tetany when
- twitches fuse into
- 1 sustained contr.
38Muscle Facts
- If a muscle is stimulated twice in quick
succession, it may not respond the 2nd time
called refractory period - Threshold the minimum stimulus needed to cause
a contraction - All-or-none increasing the strength of the
stimulation does NOT incr. the degree of
contraction (a muscle contracts completely or not
at all)
39More Facts
- Incr. stimulation from motor neurons causes a
greater of motor units to contract vice versa - Called recruitment of motor units
- Incr. the rate of stimulation also incr. the
degree of contraction - Muscle tone a sustained contraction caused by
nerve impulses from s.c. to a small of muscle
fibers in the back, neck, etc. maintains posture
40Origin Insertion
- Origin end of muscle
- that attaches to stationary
- bone
- Insertion end of muscle
- that attaches to moving
- bone
- During contr., insertion
- is pulled toward origin
41Muscle Functions in Groups
- Prime mover responsible for most of the
movement (ex.- biceps) - Synergist aids the prime mover
- Antagonist resists the prime mover
causes movement in the opposite
direction (ex. - triceps)
42Structural Differences of 3 Types of Muscle
Skeletal Muscle Smooth Muscle Cardiac Muscle
Cells elongated w/multiple nuclei/cell Cells spindle-shaped w/1 nucleus/cell Cells branching w/1 nucleus/cell
T-tubules present No T-tubules T-tubules lg. releases lg. amts. of Ca can contract longer (Ca channel blockers)
Striated/voluntary Non-striated/invol. Striated/invol.
43 44Functional Differences of 3 Types of Muscle
Skeletal Muscle Smooth Muscle Cardiac Muscle
Needs nerve impulse for contraction Displays rhythmicity cells stimulates each other (as in peristalsis) Displays rhythmicity self-excitation
Ca² binds to troponin Ca² binds to calmodulin Ca² binds to troponin
Not affected by hormones Hormones may affect contraction Hormones may affect rate of contr.
Contracts relaxes rapidly Slower to contract but can maintain contraction longer Contracts relaxes at a certain rate
45Functional Differences - Continued
Skeletal Muscle Smooth Muscle Cardiac Muscle
Not affected by stretching Stretching of fibers may stimulate contr. (ex.-stomach) Remains in a refractory pd. until contraction ends (tetany wont occur)
46Fast Twitch vs. Slow Twitch Muscle
Fast Twitch Slow Twitch
Contracts quickly, tires easily (sprinter) Contracts slowly, tires slowly (long distance)
Fewer mitochondria More mitochondria
Less myoglobin More myoglobin
White muscle Red muscle
Composes smaller muscles (eyes, hands, etc.) Composes lg. muscles (legs, back, etc.)
47Levers
- Parts of a lever
- wt., force, pivot
- 3 types of levers
- 1st class W-P-F
- (seesaw/scissors)
- 2nd class P-W-F
- (wheelbarrow)
- 3rd class W-F-P
- (forceps)
-
48Bones Muscles as Levers
- Forearm bends 3rd class lever (biceps attaches
at a pt. on the radius below the elbow joint) - Forearm straightens - 1st class lever ((triceps
attaches at a pt. on the ulna - above the elbow joint)
49Bones Muscles as Levers
Standing on tip-toe 2nd class
lever (P-W-F)