1 / 34

Physiology of a Muscle

Physiology of a Muscle. Unit 4 Part 2 Notes. What functional properties allow a muscle to perform its duties?. Irritability Ability to receive and respond to a stimulus Contractility Ability to shorten when adequate stimulus is received.

nikkos
Download Presentation

Physiology of a Muscle

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. Physiology of a Muscle Unit 4 Part 2 Notes

  2. What functional properties allow a muscle to perform its duties? • Irritability • Ability to receive and respond to a stimulus • Contractility • Ability to shorten when adequate stimulus is received

  3. What functional properties allow a muscle to perform its duties? • Conductivity • Ability for impulse to travel along plasma membrane of muscle cell • Elasticity • Ability to recoil and resume original length

  4. What role does the nervous system play in muscle movement? • Motor Unit – one neuron and all the skeletal muscle cells it stimulates

  5. Within a motor unit… • Muscle Fibers • Axons • Axon Terminals (neuromuscular junctions)

  6. Nerve endings and muscle fibers don’t physically touch… • Neuromuscular juction – where axon terminals match up with muscle fibers • Snyaptic cleft – space between nerve endings and muscle fibers; chemical impulses travel here between nerve endings and muscle

  7. Two Major Steps Of Muscle Contractions(Not in your packet-o-notes) 1st Stimulation of Muscle by Nerve • The brain sending a message through a neuron to the muscles to simply tell that muscle to MOVE! Video #1: http://tinyurl.com/NerveImpulse 2nd Muscle Contraction • Once the muscle has the message from the brain to move, the muscle will move its fibers and contract. Video #2 http://tinyurl.com/aqspwh

  8. What steps occur to stimulate muscle movement? • 1. Nerve impulse reaches axon terminals • 2. Chemical Neurotransmitter (ACh – acetylcholine) released • 3. ACh diffuses across synaptic cleft and attaches to receptors

  9. What steps occur to stimulate muscle movement? • 4. ACh causes the sarcolemma to become temporarily permeable to Na+ • 5. Na+ rush into the muscle cell • 6. Excess of positive ions creates electric current (action potential) • 7. Muscle contracts (another whole set of steps!)

  10. More animations which may help you understand how a muscle contracts! http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072495855/student_view0/chapter10/animation__action_potentials_and_muscle_contraction.htmlhttp://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072495855/student_view0/chapter10/animation__myofilament_contraction.htmlhttp://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072495855/student_view0/chapter10/animation__sarcomere_contraction.html

  11. So, we know how muscle contraction is stimulated… but now we need to know the steps that help muscle contraction to happen! • Called the Sliding Filament Theory

  12. The Sliding Filament Theory • Muscle fibers activated by nervous system due to action potential • Calcium ions (Ca+2) happen to be released • Do you remember which structure releases those calcium ions???

  13. The Sliding Filament Theory • Muscle fibers activated by nervous system due to action potential • Calcium ions (Ca+2) happen to be released • Do you remember which structure releases those calcium ions??? • THE SARCOPLASMIC RETICULUM

  14. The Sliding Filament TheoryNote: this part is worded a little differently than your packet-o-notes • Release of Ca+2 binds to troponin which then moved tropomyosin out of the way and stops it from blocking binding sites on the thin filament (actin). • Once Actin is unblocked, the cross-bridges on the thick filaments(Myosin) attach to the binding sites on the Actin • Let the sliding begin!

  15. The Sliding Filament Theory • Energized by energy from ATP, cross-bridges attach and detach from thin filaments • Works like an oar to keep moving thin filaments closer and closer together (Attach, pull, detach!) Check this video to see how it works! http://tinyurl.com/aqspwh

  16. The Sliding Filament Theory • As this process is happening in every sarcomere throughout the muscle, the muscle itself is contracting! • The whole series of events (beginning with the nervous system signal) takes just a few thousandths of a second!!!

  17. Neurotransmitter released diffuses across the synaptic cleft and attaches to ACh receptors on the sarcolemma. Axon terminal Synaptic cleft Synaptic vesicle Sarcolemma T tubule 1 Net entry of Na+ Initiates an action potential which is propagated along the sarcolemma and down the T tubules. ACh ACh ACh Ca2+ Ca2+ SR tubules (cut) SR Ca2+ Ca2+ 2 Action potential in T tubule activates voltage-sensitive receptors, which in turn trigger Ca2+ release from terminal cisternae of SR into cytosol. ADP Pi Ca2+ Ca2+ Ca2+ Ca2+ 6 Tropomyosin blockage restored, blocking myosin binding sites on actin; contraction ends and muscle fiber relaxes. 3 Calcium ions bind to troponin; troponin changes shape, removing the blocking action of tropomyosin; actin active sites exposed. Ca2+ 5 Removal of Ca2+ by active transport into the SR after the action potential ends. Ca2+ 4 Contraction; myosin heads alternately attach to actin and detach, pulling the actin filaments toward the center of the sarcomere; release of energy by ATP hydrolysis powers the cycling process.

  18. The Sliding Filament Theory • Notice in the contracted muscle, the H zone has disappeared • The I band has shortened significantly (all that’s left is the Z disc) • The A band (the dark striations!) have stayed the same thickness • Check out this animation to see what happens to the sarcomere!! http://tinyurl.com/5u8q25b

  19. Where’s all this energy coming from? • As a reminder, energy comes from ATP because of breaking a phosphate bond • Breaking a bond releases energy • When this energy is used by your body, it releases heat • Because ATP is the only energy source that can be used to move the cross-bridges back and forth (which contract the muscle), ATP must be regenerated continuously

  20. ATP Regeneration – 3 Sources • Direct phosphorylation of ADP by creatine phosphate • When ATP used, changes to ADP • Creatine phosphate adds that missing phosphorous back on! • PROBLEM: only makes 1 ATP at a time… so not very much. And, only supplies energy for 15-20 seconds of activity! • Your body will always do this, but it’s not very effective. Therefore, we have to have other ways of supplying energy…..

  21. ATP Regeneration – 3 Sources • Aerobic respiration • Occurs in the mitochondria • Glucose broken down to pyruvic acid (releasing 2 ATP), and then into carbon dioxide and water (releasing 34 ATP) • 36 ATP made for 1 glucose! A lot of energy! And, can supply energy for hours at a time! • PROBLEM: NEEDS OXYGEN • But what if you’re out of oxygen??? Then your muscles will begin……..

  22. ATP Regeneration – 3 Sources • Anaerobic glycolysis and lactic acid formation • Glucose broken down to pyruvic acid, releasing 2 ATP • If oxygen present, process continues to the rest of aerobic respiration… • BUT… if oxygen is inadequate, or muscle activity is intense, pyruvic acid is instead changed to lactic acid • PROBLEM: Buildup of lactic acid is not good… promotes muscle fatigue and soreness. And, only supplies energy for 30 seconds of activity!

  23. ATP Regeneration • 95% of ATP produced through aerobic respiration • C6H12O6 (aq) + 6O2 (g) → 6CO2 (g) + 6H2O + ATP • If you don’t have proper blood circulation or breathing, muscles can’t get oxygen needed for aerobic respiration • If they can’t get oxygen, they can’t produce enough ATP, which means muscles can’t contract!

  24. Muscle Fatigue • A muscle is fatigued when it is unable to contract even though it is being stimulated – means you don’t have ATP to move the cross-bridges! • Lack of oxygen can cause… • Lactic acid buildup (anaerobic glycolysis) • ATP supply low (production can’t keep up with usage) • Muscle will contract less and less effectively, eventually stopping contraction completely

  25. Muscle Fatigue • FYI: When you breathe heavy after physical activity, your muscles are trying to get enough oxygen for aerobic respiration to replace all of the ATP you used!

  26. Muscle Contraction • Isotonic contractions • Myofilaments slide, shortening the muscle • Movement occurs – bending knee, rotating arms, smiling

  27. Muscle Contraction • Isometric contractions • Myofilaments trying to slide, but can’t – just building up tension (crossbridges are “rowing”, but actin is not moving together) • Movement doesn’t occur – object too heavy to lift, push against wall

  28. Muscle Tone • Muscle tone – sustained partial contraction of a muscle; muscle stays firm, healthy, and ready for action • Muscle inactivity can lead to muscle weakness and wasting (this is why Range of Motion exercises on bedridden people is important!)

  29. Effect of Exercise on Muscles • Aerobic exercises include… • Running • Jogging • Biking • Elliptical

  30. Effect of Exercise on Muscles • Increase endurance of muscles because muscle cells will form more mitochondria and store more oxygen (meaning more energy for the muscles) • Also – improves body metabolism, improve digestion, enhance coordination, strengthens skeleton, heart & lungs more efficient • Muscles do NOT increase in size!

  31. Effect of Exercise on Muscles • Resistance exercises include… • Pushing against wall • Contracting muscles (likes gluteus maximus) • Lifting weights • Does increase muscle size! • Due to enlargement of individual muscle cells (makes more myofilaments) • You don’t add more muscle cells – you just bulk up the ones you already have!!! • NEED BOTH TYPES OF EXERCISES IN ANY TRAINING PROGRAM!

More Related