Title: Muscle Structure and Function
1Muscle Structure and Function
2Learning Objectives
- To describe muscles macro and micro structures
- To explain the sliding-filament action of
muscular contraction - To differentiate among types of muscle fibres
- To describe group action of muscles
3Types of Muscle
- The human body is comprised of 324 muscles
- Muscle makes up 30-35 (in women) and 42-47 (in
men) of body mass. - Three types of
muscle
4A. Skeletal (Striated) Muscle
- Connects the various parts of the skeleton
through one or more connective tissue tendons - During muscle contraction, skeletal muscle
shortens and moves various parts of the skeleton - Through graded activation of the muscles, the
speed and smoothness of the movement can be
gradated - Activated through signals carried to the muscles
via nerves (voluntary control) - Repeated activation of a skeletal muscle can lead
to fatigue - Biomechanics assessment of movement and the
sequential pattern of muscle activation that move
body segments
5B. Smooth Muscle
- Located in the blood vessels, the respiratory
tract, the iris of the eye, the gastro-intestinal
tract - The contractions are slow and uniform
- Functions to alter the activity of various body
parts to meet the needs of the body at that time - Is fatigue resistant
- Activation is involuntary
6C. Cardiac Muscle
- Has characteristics of both skeletal and smooth
muscle - Functions to provide the contractile activity of
the heart - Contractile activity can be gradated (like
skeletal muscle) - Is very fatigue resistant
- Activation of cardiac muscle is involuntary (like
smooth muscle)
7Components of skeletal muscle
d) myofibril c) muscle fibre b)
muscle fibre bundle a) Muscle belly
8Muscle Fibres
- Cylinder-shaped cells that make up skeletal
muscle - Each fibre is made up of a number of myofilaments
- Diameter of fibre (0.05-0.10 mm)
- Length of fibre (appr. 15 cm)
- Surrounded by a connective tissue sheath called
Sarcolemma - Many fibres are enclosed by connective tissue
sheath Perimycium to form bundle of fibres - Each fibre contains contractile machinery and
cell organelles - Activated through impulses via motor end plate
- Group of fibres activated via same nerve motor
unit - Each fibre has capillaries that supply nutrients
and eliminate waste
9Muscle Teamwork
- Agonist (prime mover)
- - the muscle or group of muscles producing a
desired effect - Antagonist
- - the muscle or group of muscles opposing the
action - Synergist
- - the muscles surrounding the joint being
moved - Fixators
- - the muscle or group of muscles that steady
joints closer to the body axis so that the
desired action can occur
10Bending or straightening of elbow requires the
coordinated interplay of the biceps and triceps
muscles
11Contractile MachinerySarcomeres
- Contractile units
- Organized in series ( attached end to end)
- Two types of protein myofilaments
- - Actin thin filament
- - Myosin thick filament
- Each myosin is surrounded by six actin filaments
- Projecting from each myosin are tiny contractile
myosin bridges
12High microscope magnification of sarcomeres
within a myofibril
13Contractile MachineryCrossbridge formation and
movement
- Cross bridge movement
- - similar to the stroking of the oars and
movement of rowing shell - - movement of myosin filaments in relation to
actin filaments - - shortening of the sarcomere
- - shortening of each sarcomere is additive
- Cross bridge formation
- a signal comes from the motor nerve
activating the fibre
- the heads of the myosin filaments
temporarily attach themselves to the actin
filaments
Longitudinal section of myofibril
b) Contraction
14Contractile MachineryOptimal Crossbridge
formation
Longitudinal section of myofibril
- Sarcomeres should be optimal distance apart
- For muscle contraction optimal distance is
(0.0019-0.0022 mm) - At this distance an optimal number of cross
bridges is formed - If the sarcomeres are stretched farther apart
than optimal distance - - fewer cross bridges can form ? less force
produced - If the sarcomeres are too close together
- - cross bridges interfere with one another
as they form ? less force produced
c) Powerful stretching
d) Powerful contraction
15Contractile MachineryOptimal muscle length and
optimal joint angle
- The distance between sarcomeres is dependent on
the stretch of the muscle and the position of the
joint - Maximal muscle force occurs at optimal muscle
length (lo) - Maximal muscle force occurs at optimal joint
angle - Optimal joint angle occurs at optimal muscle
length
16 Muscle tension during elbow flexion at constant
speed
17Contractile MachineryTendons, origin, insertion
- In order for muscles to contract, they must be
attached to the bones to create movement - Tendons strong fibrous tissues at the ends of
each muscle that attach muscle to bone - Origin the end of the muscle attached to
the bone that does not move - Insertion the point of attachment of the
muscle on the bone that moves
18 Muscle Fibre Types
19A. Slow Twitch Fibres
- Suited for repeated contractions during
activities requiring a force output of lt 20-25
of max force output - Examples lower power activities, endurance
events
20B) Fast Twitch Fibres
- Significantly greater force and speed generating
capability than slow twitch fibres - Well suited for activities involving high power
- Examples sprinting, jumping, throwing
21The Muscle Biopsy
- Used to determine muscle fibre type
- 1. Injection of local anesthetic into the muscle
being sampled - 2. Incision of approximately 5-7mm is made in the
skin and fascia of the muscle - 3. The piece of tissue (250-300mg) removed via
the biopsy needle is imbedded in OCT compound - 4. The sample is frozen in isopentane cooled to
180C
22Muscle Biopsy
23The Histochemistry
- The biopsy samples are first sectioned (8-10 µm
thickness) - Sections are processed for myosin ATPase
- Fast twitch fibres rich in myosin
ATPase (alkaline labile) - Slow twitch fibres low in myosin
ATPase (acid labile) - Sections are processed for other metabolic
characteristics
24Nerve-Muscle Interaction
- Skeletal muscle activation is initiated through
neural activation - NS can be divided into central (CNS) and
peripheral (PNS) - The NS can be divided in terms of function motor
and sensory activity - Sensory collects info from the various sensors
located throughout the body and transmits the
info to the brain - Motor conducts signals to activate muscle
contraction
25Activation of motor unit and its innervation
systems
- Spinal cord 2. Cytosome 3. Spinal
nerve - 4. Motor nerve 5. Sensory nerve 6. Muscle
with muscle fibres
26Motor Unit
- Motor nerves extend from the spinal cord to the
muscle fibres - Each fibre is activated through impulses
delivered via motor end plate - Motor unit a group of fibres activated via the
same nerve - All muscle fibres of one particular motor unit
are always of the same fibre type - Muscles needed to perform precise movements
generally consist of a large number of motor
units and few muscle fibres - Less precise movements are carried out by muscles
composed of fewer motor units with many fibres
per unit
27All-or-none Principle
- Whether or not a motor unit activates upon the
arrival of an impulse depends upon the so called
all-or-none principle - An impulse of a certain magnitude (or strength)
is required to cause the innervated fibres to
contract - Every motor unit has a specific threshold that
must be reached for such activation to occur
28Intra-muscle Coordination
- The capacity to apply motor units simultaneously
is known as intra-muscle coordination - Many highly trained power athletes, such as
weightlifters, wrestlers, and shot putters, are
able to activate up to 85 of their available
muscle fibres simultaneously (untrained 60) - Force deficit the difference between assisted
and voluntarily generated maximal force (trained
10, untrained 20-35)
29Intra-muscle Coordination cont.
- Trained athletes have not only a larger muscle
mass than untrained individuals, but can also
exploit a larger number of muscle fibres - Athletes are more restricted in further
developing strength by improving intra-muscular
coordination - Trained individuals can further increase strength
only by increasing muscle diameter
30Inter-muscle Coordination
- The interplay between muscles that generate
movement through contraction (agonists) and
muscles responsible for opposing movement
(antagonists) is called inter-muscle coordination - The greater the participation of muscles and
muscle groups, the higher the importance of
inter-muscle coordination - To benefit from strength training the individual
muscle groups can be trained in relative
isolation - Difficulties may occur if the athlete fails to
develop all the relevant muscles in a balanced
manner
31Inter-muscle Coordination cont.
- High-level inter-muscle coordination greatly
improves strength performance and also enhances
the flow, rhythm, and precision of movement - Trained athlete is able to translate strength
potential to enhance inter-muscle coordination
32Muscles Adaptation to Strength Training
- Individuals performance improvements occur
through a process of biological adaptation, which
is reflected in the bodys increased strength - Adaptation process proceeds at different time
rates for different functional systems and
physiological processes - Adaptation depends on intensity levels used in
training and on athletes unique biological
make-up - Enzymes adapt within hours, cardiovascular
adaptation within 10 to 14 days