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Muscle Tissue 2

Muscle Tissue 2. Muscle Contrations. The Sliding Filament Theory. The thin filaments (actin) slide over the thick causing the sarcomere to shorten. This process requires ATP. Mechanism of Filament Sliding Animation. http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/matthews/myosin.html.

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Muscle Tissue 2

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  1. Muscle Tissue 2 Muscle Contrations

  2. The Sliding Filament Theory • The thin filaments (actin) slide over the thick causing the sarcomere to shorten. This process requires ATP

  3. Mechanism of Filament Sliding Animation • http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/matthews/myosin.html

  4. Neuromuscular Junction • Where a muscle is innervated -OR- • Place where a nerve meets a muscle

  5. Neuron • Nerve Cell

  6. Motor Neuron • The nerve that stimulates a muscle to contract

  7. Motor End Plate • Axon of a motor neuron that attaches to the sarcolemma of the muscle fiber  Motor End Plate Muscle   Neuron

  8. Motor Unit • The combination of the motor neuron and the muscle it innervates

  9. Physiology of Contraction • An action potential causes the release of Ca+2 ions stimulating the myosin to move the actin filament • http://www.brookscole.com/chemistry_d/templates/student_resources/shared_resources/animations/muscles/muscles.html • (labeling picture)

  10. Muscle Contraction Summary • http://bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire/content/chp47/4702001.html • Narrated Summary with tabs

  11. Energy for Contraction • The body uses ATP for energy • This ATP can be produced by the body in 3 ways

  12. Phosphagen System • ADP + P + Energy  ATP • Fast • Not a lot of energy

  13. Anaerobic System • 1C6H12O6 2C3H6O3 + ATP • Glucose is broken down into Pyruvic Acid • Needs no oxygen • Not a lot of ATP

  14. Aerobic System • 1C3H6O3 + O2 CO2 + H2O + ATP • Starts with Pyruvic Acid from Anaerobic • Needs Oxygen to take place • Makes a lot of energy • Many Steps - longest

  15. What Happens When You Exercise • The muscle cells burn off the ATP they have floating around in about 3 seconds. • The phosphagen system kicks in and supplies energy for 8 to 10 seconds. This would be the major energy system used by the muscles of a 100-meter sprinter or weight lifter, where rapid acceleration, short-duration exercise occurs. • If exercise continues longer, then the glycogen-lactic acid system kicks in. This would be true for short-distance exercises such as a 200- or 400-meter dash or 100-meter swim. • Finally, if exercise continues, then aerobic respiration takes over. This would occur in endurance events such as an 800-meter dash, marathon run, rowing, cross-country skiing and distance skating.

  16. All or None Principle • When a muscle fiber is stimulates it either completely contracts or does not contract at all

  17. Threshold Stimulus – the weakest stimulus that can cause a muscle to contract • Sub-Threshold Stimulus – a stimulus that is too weak to cause a contraction

  18. Myogram • A record of the electrical activity of a muscle to determine the type of contraction

  19. Twitch • A rapid, jerky response to a single stimulus

  20. Latent Period – time between the application of the stimulus and the muscle contraction • Contraction Period – time when filament are sliding over each other, causing a contraction • Relaxation Period – Time during which filaments are sliding back into place • Refractory Period – Time following a contraction during which a muscle is unable to respond to a stimulus

  21. Refractory Period Contraction Period Relaxation Period Latent Period

  22. Tetanus • A sustained contration

  23. Treppe • A muscle contracts more forcefullu after contracting several times

  24. Isotonic • Tension remains constant but the muscle shortens • Lifting

  25. Isometric • Tension increases but muscle does not shorten

  26. Muscle Tension • The force of a muscle contraction

  27. Muscle Tone • State of partial contraction – muscle is tight but not causing movement

  28. Muscular Atrophy • Wasting away of muscle

  29. Muscular Hypertrophy • Increase in the size of muscle fibers

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