1 / 85

Muscle Time with Hans and Franz

Muscle Time with Hans and Franz . Today’s goal: learn types, characteristics, functions, attachments, organization of muscles . http://www.hulu.com/watch/4184/saturday-night-live-pumping-up-with-hans-and-franz. Post it Time. First muscle test will be general: Focus on Types

lynn
Download Presentation

Muscle Time with Hans and Franz

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Muscle Time with Hans and Franz Today’s goal: learn types, characteristics, functions, attachments, organization of muscles http://www.hulu.com/watch/4184/saturday-night-live-pumping-up-with-hans-and-franz

  2. Post it Time • First muscle test will be general: • Focus on • Types • Characteristics • Functions • The Tough stuff is organization!

  3. 2.0 test questions • What are the characteristics of muscle? • What are the types of muscle? • What are the characteristics of cardiac muscle? • What are the functions of muscles?

  4. 3 Muscle Types • Skeletal (our major focus over the next ~2 weeks) • Smooth – surrounds hollow organ • Cardiac – Bachelor Rejects have broken these

  5. Three Types of Muscle Tissue • Skeletal muscle tissue: • Attached to bones and skin • Striated • Voluntary • Powerful

  6. Three Types of Muscle Tissue • Cardiac muscle tissue: • Only in the heart • Striated • Involuntary

  7. Three Types of Muscle Tissue • Smooth muscle tissue: • In the walls of hollow organs, e.g., stomach, urinary bladder, and airways • Not striated • Involuntary

  8. Special Characteristics of Muscle Tissue • Excitability (responsiveness or “irritability”): receive and respond to stimuli • Contractility: ability to shorten when stimulated • Stretchable • Elasticity: recoils to resting length

  9. Muscle Functions • Movement of bones or fluids (e.g., blood) • Maintaining posture and body position • Stabilizing joints • Heat generation

  10. Skeletal Muscle: Attachments • Muscles attach: • Directly—epimysium of muscle fuses to outer membrane of bone • tendon or sheetlikeaponeurosis

  11. Skeletal Muscle • Each muscle is served by one artery, one nerve, and one or more veins • But just what is a muscle???

  12. Muscle organization • Muscles made up of tons (100s to 1000s) muscle fibers • Muscle fiber is a sophisticated way of saying muscle cell! • Muscle cell is bourgeois to say muscle fiber • Blood vessels and nerve fibers also found throughout muscle

  13. Fibers are wrapped by CT

  14. Russian Dolls • Muscle • Fascicle • Fiber • Myofibrils • Myofilaments • Above: Your next week, somewhat simplified though not a perfect analogy

  15. Connective tissue sheaths of skeletal muscle • Epimysium: dense regular CT surrounding entire muscle • Perimysium: fibrous CT surrounding fascicles (groups of muscle fibers) • Endomysium: fine areolarCT surrounding each muscle fiber

  16. Epimysium Epimysium Bone Perimysium Endomysium Tendon Muscle fiber in middle of a fascicle (b) Blood vessel Fascicle (wrapped by perimysium) Endomysium (between individual muscle fibers) Perimysium Fascicle Muscle fiber (a) Figure 9.1

  17. Fiber is an individual cells • Fibers are bundled into fascicles • Fascicles bundled into muscle

  18. Today: • Review yesterday • Muscle “cells” • Organelles of the muscle fiber

  19. What is a muscle cel… you mean fiber like? 1 muscle cell • Cylindrical up to 1 foot long! • Multiple nuclei • Many mitochondria

  20. Muscle fibers • Glycosomes for glycogen storage, myoglobin for O2 storage • Modified organelles: myofibrils, sarcoplasmic reticulum, sarcolemma and T tubules

  21. Myofibrils • Densely packed, rodlike elements • ~80% of cell volume • These are where we will see striations • A and I bands alternate

  22. Myofibrils are made of myofilaments! • Forest is a fiber • Tree is a myofibril • 1 branch is myofilament

  23. Sarcolemma Mitochondrion Myofibril Dark A band Light I band Nucleus (b) Diagram of part of a muscle fiber showing the myofibrils. Onemyofibril is extended afrom the cut end of the fiber.

  24. Sarcomere • Smallest contractile unit (functional unit) of a muscle fiber • region of a myofibril • between two successive Z discs • Composed of thick and thin myofilaments made of contractile proteins Poorly comparble to an osteon And bone

  25. Features of a Sarcomere • Thick filaments: run the entire length of an A band • Thin filaments: run the length of the I band and partway into the A band

  26. Z disc: sheet of proteins that anchors the thin filaments • connects myofibrils to one another • H zone: lighter midregion where filaments do not overlap • M line: line of protein myomesin that holds adjacent thick filaments together

  27. Thin (actin) filament Z disc H zone Z disc Thick (myosin) filament I band A band Sarcomere I band M line (c) Small part of one myofibril enlarged to show the myofilaments responsible for the banding pattern. Each sarcomereextends from one Z disc to the next. Sarcomere Z disc Z disc M line Thin (actin) filament Elastic (titin) filaments Thick (myosin) filament (d) Enlargement of one sarcomere (sectioned lengthwise). Notice the myosin heads on the thick filaments. Figure 9.2c, d

  28. Structure of Thick Filament • Composed of the protein myosin (tail and head) • Myosin tails contain: • 2 interwoven, protein chains • Myosin heads contain: • 2 smaller, light chains that act as cross bridges during contraction • Binding sites for actin(thin filaments) • Binding sites for ATP • ATPase enzymes

  29. Structure of Thin Filament • Twisted double strand of fibrous protein F actin • F actin consists of G (globular) actin subunits • G actin bears active sites for myosin head attachment during contraction • Tropomyosin and troponin: regulatory proteins bound to actin

  30. Longitudinal section of filaments within one sarcomere of a myofibril Thick filament Thin filament In the center of the sarcomere, the thick filaments lack myosin heads. Myosin heads are present only in areas of myosin-actin overlap. Thick filament Thin filament Each thick filament consists of many myosin molecules whose heads protrude at opposite ends of the filament. A thin filament consists of two strands of actin subunits twisted into a helix plus two types of regulatory proteins (troponin and tropomyosin). Portion of a thick filament Portion of a thin filament Myosin head Tropomyosin Troponin Actin Actin-binding sites Active sites for myosin attachment Tail Heads Actin subunits ATP- binding site Flexible hinge region Myosin molecule Actin subunits Figure 9.3

  31. Sarcoplasmic Reticulum (SR) • Network of smooth endoplasmic reticulum surrounding each myofibril • Pairs of terminal cisternae form perpendicular cross channels • Regulates intracellular Ca2+ levels

  32. T Tubules • Continuous with the sarcolemma • Sarcolemma = cell membrane of muscle fiber • Penetrate the cell’s interior at each A band–I band junction • Associate with the paired terminal cisternae to form triads that encircle each sarcomere

  33. Organelles

  34. Part of a skeletal muscle fiber (cell) I band A band I band Z disc H zone Z disc Myofibril M line Sarcolemma Triad: T tubule • • Terminal cisternae of the SR (2) Sarcolemma Tubules of the SR Myofibrils Mitochondria Figure 9.5

  35. Triad Relationships • T tubules conduct impulses deep into muscle fiber • Integral proteins protrude from T tubule and SR cisternae membranes • T tubule proteins: voltage sensors • SR has gated channels that regulate Ca2+ release from the SR cisternae

  36. Contraction • The generation of force • Does not necessarily cause shortening of the fiber • Shortening occurs when tension generated by cross bridges on the thin filaments exceeds forces opposing shortening

  37. Sliding Filament Model of Contraction • In the relaxed state, thin and thick filaments overlap only slightly • During contraction, myosin heads bind to actin, detach, and bind again, to propel the thin filaments toward the M line

  38. As H zones shorten and disappear, sarcomeres shorten, muscle cells shorten, and the whole muscle shortens

  39. Role of Calcium (Ca2+) in Contraction • At low intracellular Ca2+ concentration: • Tropomyosin blocks the active sites on actin • Myosin heads cannot attach to actin • Muscle fiber relaxes

  40. Role of Calcium (Ca2+) in Contraction • At higher intracellular Ca2+ concentrations: • Ca2+ binds to troponin • Troponin changes shape and moves tropomyosin away from active sites • Events of the cross bridge cycle occur • When nervous stimulation ceases, Ca2+ is pumped back into the SR and contraction ends

  41. Cross Bridge Cycle • Continues as long as the Ca2+ signal and adequate ATP are present • Cross bridge formation—high-energy myosin head attaches to thin filament • Working (power) stroke—myosin head pivots and pulls thin filament toward M line

  42. Cross Bridge Cycle • Cross bridge detachment—ATP attaches to myosin head and the cross bridge detaches • “Cocking” of the myosin head—energy from hydrolysis of ATP cocks the myosin head into the high-energy state

  43. Thin filament Ca2+ Actin ADP Myosin cross bridge Pi Thick filament Myosin Cross bridge formation. 1 ADP ADP Pi ATP hydrolysis Pi The power (working) stroke. 4 2 Cocking of myosin head. ATP ATP Cross bridge detachment. 3 Figure 9.12

  44. Actin Thin filament Ca2+ ADP Myosin cross bridge Pi Thick filament Myosin Cross bridge formation. 1 Figure 9.12, step 1

  45. ADP Pi The power (working) stroke. 2 Figure 9.12, step 3

  46. ATP Cross bridge detachment. 3 Figure 9.12, step 4

  47. ADP ATP hydrolysis Pi Cocking of myosin head. 4 Figure 9.12, step 5

  48. Actin Thin filament Ca2+ ADP Myosin cross bridge Pi Thick filament Myosin Cross bridge formation. 1 Figure 9.12, step 1

  49. ADP Pi The power (working) stroke. 2 Figure 9.12, step 3

More Related