1 / 8

Energy for Muscle Contraction:

Energy for Muscle Contraction:. Initially, muscles use stored ATP for energy Bonds of ATP are broken to release energy Only 4-6 seconds worth of ATP is stored by muscles After this initial time, other pathways must be utilized to produce ATP:. 1. Direct Phosphorylation of ADP by CP.

paige
Download Presentation

Energy for Muscle Contraction:

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. Energy for Muscle Contraction: • Initially, muscles use stored ATP for energy • Bonds of ATP are broken to release energy • Only 4-6 seconds worth of ATP is stored by muscles • After this initial time, other pathways must be utilized to produce ATP:

  2. 1. Direct Phosphorylation of ADP by CP Muscle cells contain creatine phosphate (CP) • CP is a high-energy molecule • After ATP is depleted, ADP is left • CP transfers energy to ADP, to regenerate ATP • CP supplies are exhausted in about 15-20 seconds Figure 6.10a

  3. Aerobic Respiration • Aerobic Respiration • Series of metabolic pathways that occur in the mitochondria • Glucose is broken down to carbon dioxide and water, releasing energy • This is a slower reaction that requires continuous oxygen 95% of the ATP used for muscle activity comes from aerobic respiration. Figure 6.10b

  4. Anaerobic Glycolysis • Anaerobic glycolysis • Reaction that breaks down glucose without oxygen • Glucose is broken down to pyruvic acid to produce some ATP • The waste product lactic acid is produced. Figure 6.10c

  5. Energy for Muscle Contraction • Anaerobic glycolysis (continued) • This reaction is not as efficient, but is fast • Huge amounts of glucose are needed • Lactic acid produces muscle fatigue Figure 6.10c

  6. Muscle Fatigue and Oxygen Debt • When a muscle is fatigued, it is unable to contract • The common reason for muscle fatigue is oxygen debt • Oxygen must be “repaid” to tissue to remove oxygen debt • Oxygen is required to get rid of accumulated lactic acid • Increasing acidity (from lactic acid) and lack of ATP causes the muscle to contract less

  7. Isotonic contractions • Muscle shortens as it contracts • There is movement involved (entire muscle). • Ex. Knee bends, smile, flexing your biceps, rotate your arms • Isometric contractions : • There is tension on a muscle but no movement is made causing the length of the muscle to remain the same. • Myofilaments are unsuccessful in their sliding movements. • Example: Lifting a 400lb dresser alone, trying to lift immovable objects

  8. Muscle Tone • Some fibers are contracted even in a relaxed muscle • Different fibers contract at different times to provide muscle tone • The process of stimulating various fibers is under involuntary control • Flaccid-not firm • Atrophy-muscle is broken down

More Related