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MUSCLES- About this Chapter. Skeletal muscle Mechanics of body movement Smooth muscle Cardiac muscle. The Three Types of Muscle. Figure 12-1a. The Three Types of Muscle. Figure 12-1b. The Three Types of Muscle. Figure 12-1c. Skeletal Muscle.
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MUSCLES-About this Chapter • Skeletal muscle • Mechanics of body movement • Smooth muscle • Cardiac muscle
The Three Types of Muscle Figure 12-1a
The Three Types of Muscle Figure 12-1b
The Three Types of Muscle Figure 12-1c
Skeletal Muscle • Human body contains over 400 skeletal muscles • 40-50% of total body weight • Functions of skeletal muscle-Genrates • Force for locomotion and breathing • Force production for postural support • Heat production during cold stress
Anatomy Summary: Skeletal Muscle Figure 12-3a (2 of 2)
Fascicles: bundles, CT(connective tissue) covering on each one • Muscle fibers: muscle cells
Structure of Skeletal Muscle:Microstructure • Sarcolemma • Transverse (T) tubule • Longitudinal tubule (Sarcoplasmic reticulum, SR) • Myofibrils • Actin(thin filament) • Troponin • Tropomyosin • Myosin(thick filament)
Within the sarcoplasm Triad • Transverse tubules • Sarcoplasmic reticulum -Storage sites for calcium • Terminal cisternae - Storage sites for calcium
Sarcomeres • Sarcomere:bundle of alternating thick and thin filaments • Sarcomeres join end to end to form myofibrils • Thousands per fiber, depending on length of muscle • Alternating thick and thin filaments create appearance of striations
Myosin • Myosin head is hinged • Bends and straightens during contraction
Thick filaments (myosin) • Bundle of myosin proteins shaped like double-headed golf clubs • Myosin heads have two binding sites • Actin binding site forms cross bridge • Nucleotide binding site binds ATP (Myosin ATPase) • Hydrolysis of ATP provides energy to generate power stroke
Thin filaments (actin) • Backbone: two strands of polymerizedglobularactin – fibrous actin • Each actin has myosin binding site • Troponin • Binds Ca2+; regulates muscle contraction • Tropomyosin • Lies in groove of actin helix • Blocks myosin binding • sites in absence of Ca2+
Thick filament: Myosin (head and tail) • Thin filament: Actin, Tropomyosin, Troponin (calcium binding site)
III Molecular Mechanism of Muscular Contraction • The sliding filament model • Muscle shortening is due to movement of the actin filament over the myosin filament • Reduces the distance between Z-lines
Changes in the appearance of a Sarcomere during the Contraction of a Skeletal Muscle Fiber
Energy for Muscle Contraction • ATP is required for muscle contraction • Myosin ATPase breaks down ATP as fiber contracts