740 likes | 1.19k Views
Muscle Overview. The three types of muscle tissue are skeletal, cardiac, and smoothThese types differ in structure, location, function, and means of activation. Muscle Similarities. Skeletal and smooth muscle cells are elongated and are called muscle fibersMuscle contraction depends on two kinds o
E N D
1. Chapter 10:Muscle Tissue
2. Muscle Overview The three types of muscle tissue are skeletal, cardiac, and smooth
These types differ in structure, location, function, and means of activation
3. Muscle Similarities Skeletal and smooth muscle cells are elongated and are called muscle fibers
Muscle contraction depends on two kinds of myofilaments – actin and myosin
Muscle terminology is similar
Sarcolemma – muscle plasma membrane
Sarcoplasm – cytoplasm of a muscle cell
Prefixes – myo, mys, and sarco all refer to muscle
4. Functions of Skeletal Muscles Produce skeletal movement
Maintain body position
Support soft tissues
Guard body openings
Maintain body temperature
5. Organization of Connective Tissues Connective tissue wrappings
epimysium-surrounds the ‘whole’ muscle
perimysium- surrounds the ‘fascicle’
endomysium- surrounds each muscle fiber
all of these sheaths are continuous w/ each other as well as tendons & aponeuroses that connect to bone
transmits force of contraction to the bone to be moved
6. Skeletal Muscle: Nerve and Blood Supply Each muscle is served by one nerve, an artery, and one or more veins
Each skeletal muscle fiber is supplied with a nerve ending that controls contraction
Contracting fibers require continuous delivery of oxygen and nutrients via arteries
Wastes must be removed via veins
7. Microscopic anatomy of skeletal muscle Muscle fiber = muscle cell
skeletal muscle fibers are long & cylindrical & are multinucleate
Fibers are 10 to 100 ?m in diameter, and up to hundreds of centimeters long
Plasma membrane = sarcolemma
lemma = husk
Cytoplasm = sarcoplasm
contain large amts of glycosomes (stored glycogen) & myoglobin (store O2 w/in mm cell)
8. Myofibrils The contractile elements of skeletal muscle cells
account for 80% of cell volume
100’s to 1000’s are in a single muscle fiber
Made up of bundles of protein filaments (myofilaments)
9. Striations Result from darker A Bands & lighter I Bands
a sarcomere is the region of a myofibril between 2 successive Z-Discs
the sarcomere is the smallest contractile unit of a muscle fiber (cell)
10. A band Dark
contain thick filaments (myofilaments)
has a central H zone visible only when the muscle is in a relaxed state (thin filaments do not overlap the thick ones in this region)
has a slightly darker M line in middle of H zone because of protein strands (desmin) that hold adjacent thick filaments together Light
interrupted in the middle by a darker line called the Z disc (AKA Z line)
composed of proteins (connectins)
anchors thin filaments & connects each myofibril to the next throughout the width of the muscle cell
Titin - Strands of protein that reach from tips of thick filaments to the Z line to stabilize the filaments
11. Transverse Tubules (T tubules) Transmit action potential through cell
Allow entire muscle fiber to contract simulataneously
Have same properties as sarcolemma
12. Sarcoplasmic Reticulum A membranous structure surrounding each myofibril similar in structure to smooth e.r.
Helps transmit action potential to myofibril
Forms chambers (terminal cisternae) attached to T tubules
Function to regulate intracellular levels of ionic calcium
stores calcium & releases it on demand when the muscle fiber is stimulated to contract
13. Skeletal Muscle Contraction In order to contract, a skeletal muscle must:
Be stimulated by a nerve ending
Propagate an electrical current, or action potential, along its sarcolemma
Have a rise in intracellular Ca2+ levels, the final trigger for contraction
14. Contraction vs Shortening Contraction = Caused by interactions of thick and thin filaments. Ends when cross bridges become inactive & the tension generated declines, inducing relaxation of the muscle fiber
Shortening = forces generated by cross bridges on the thin filament is greater than forces opposing shortening
15. Types of Myofilaments Actin (thin filaments) AKA F actin
subunit called G actin has sites to bind to myosin
contains 2 types of proteins (troponin & tropomyosin)
tropomyosin stiffens the actin & blocks active sites in a relaxed muscle so myosin cannot bind
troponin helps to position tropomyosin on the actin & helps to bind calcium ions
Myosin (thick filaments)
each molecule has a tail & 2 heads (cross bridges)
heads contain ATP binding sites & ATPase enzymes to split ATP to generate E for contraction
~200 myosin molecules per each thick filament within a sarcomere
16. 4 Thin Filament Proteins F actin: is 2 twisted rows of globular G actin
the active sites on G actin strands bind to myosin
Nebulin: holds F actin strands together
Tropomyosin: is a double strand
prevents actin–myosin interaction
Troponin: binds tropomyosin to G actin
controlled by Ca2+
17. The Mysosin Molecule Tail: binds to other myosin molecules
Head: made of 2 globular protein subunits
reaches the nearest thin filament
During contraction, myosin heads interact with actin filaments, forming cross-bridges
pivot, producing motion
18. Skeletal Muscle Contraction Sliding filament theory:
Contractions that produce a shortening of the muscle cell
thin filaments of sarcomere slide between thick filaments toward M line
A bands move closer together but do not change in length
Z lines move closer together
I bands are shortened
19. Excitation–Contraction Coupling Action potential reaches a triad:
releasing Ca2+ and triggering contraction
Requires myosin heads to be in “cocked” position:
loaded by ATP energy
20. Exposure of binding sites Cross bridge attachment to actin requires calcium ions
nerve impulse leading to contraction causes an increase in intracellular calcium []
low levels of intracellular calcium causes muscle relaxation & tropomyosin blocks binding sites on actin
w/available Ca, the Ca binds to sites on troponin causing it to change shape & the tropomyosin moves away from the myosin binding sites
21. 5 Steps of the Contraction Cycle Exposure of active sites
Formation of cross-bridges
Pivoting of myosin heads
Detachment of cross-bridges
Reactivation “cocking” of myosin
22. The Contraction Cycle
23. A single working stroke of all the cross bridges in a muscle results in a shortening of only about 1 %
routinely muscles contract between 30-35% of their total resting length
probably only one-half of the myosin heads are actively exerting a pulling force at the same time
the other half are actively seeking their next binding site
24. The Process of Contraction A skeletal muscle fiber must be stimulated by a nerve ending and must propagate an electrical current (action potential) along its sarcolemma in order to contract.
causes excitation–contraction coupling
Cisternae of SR release Ca2+ which triggers interaction of thick and thin filaments
consuming ATP and producing tension
25. Voluntary nervous system Motor neurons of the somatic (voluntary) nervous system stimulate skeletal muscle to contract
cell bodies reside in the brain/spinal cord
axons (efferent) travel to the muscle cells they serve
axons divide many times to form neuromuscular junctions w/ individual muscle fibers
each muscle fiber has only one neuromuscular junction located at the approximate middle of the fiber
26. Neuromuscular Junction The neuromuscular junction is formed from:
Axonal endings, which have small membranous sacs (synaptic vesicles) that contain the neurotransmitter acetylcholine (ACh)
The motor end plate of a muscle, which is a specific part of the sarcolemma that contains ACh receptors and helps form the neuromuscular junction
Though exceedingly close, axonal ends and muscle fibers are always separated by a space called the synaptic cleft
27. The Neurotransmitter Acetylcholine or ACh:
travels across the synaptic cleft & binds to receptors on sarcolemma (motor end plate)
Causes Na+ to rush into sarcoplasm causing interior of cell to become less negative (more positive)
This event is called depolarization
Is quickly broken down by enzyme (acetylcholinesterase or AChE)
This destruction prevents continued muscle fiber contraction in the absence of additional stimuli
28. Action Potential Generated by increase in sodium ions in sarcolemma
Travels along the T tubules
Leads to excitation–contraction coupling
29. Skeletal Muscle Innervation
30. A Review of Muscle Contraction
31. A Review of Muscle Contraction
32. Rigor Mortis A fixed muscular contraction after death
Caused when:
ion pumps cease to function
calcium builds up in the sarcoplasm
33. Tension Production The all–or–none principal:
as a whole, a muscle fiber is either contracted or relaxed
34. Tension of a Single Muscle Fiber Depends on:
The number of pivoting cross-bridges
The fiber’s resting length at the time of stimulation
Normal resting sarcomere length is 75% to 130% of optimal length
The frequency of stimulation
35. Length–Tension Relationship Number of pivoting cross-bridges depends on:
amount of overlap between thick and thin fibers
Optimum overlap produces greatest amount of tension:
too much or too little reduces efficiency
36. Frequency of Stimulation A single neural stimulation produces:
a single contraction or twitch
which lasts about 7–100 msec
Length of twitch depends on type of muscle
Sustained muscular contractions:
require many repeated stimuli
37. 3 Phases of Twitch Latent period before contraction:
the action potential moves through sarcolemma
causing Ca2+ release
Contraction phase:
calcium ions bind
tension builds to peak
Relaxation phase:
Ca2+ levels fall
active sites are covered
tension falls to resting levels
38. Treppe Repeated stimulations immediately after relaxation phase:
stimulus frequency < 50/second
Causes a series of contractions with increasing tension
Basis for warm-up in athletes
39. Wave (Temporal) Summation Repeated stimulations before the end of relaxation phase:
stimulus frequency > 50/second
Causes increasing tension or summation of twitches
Incomplete tetanus - twitches reach maximum tension
40. Complete Tetanus If stimulation frequency is high enough, muscle never begins to relax, and is in continuous contraction
41. Motor Units in a Skeletal Muscle Contain hundreds of muscle fibers that contract at the same time
Controlled by a single motor neuron
Recruitment – multiple motor unit stimulation
42. Muscle Tone The normal tension and firmness of a muscle at rest
Muscle units actively maintain body position, without motion
Increasing muscle tone increases metabolic energy used, even at rest
43. 2 Types of Skeletal Muscle Tension Isotonic contraction - skeletal muscle changes length resulting in motion
If muscle tension > resistance:
muscle shortens (concentric contraction)
If muscle tension < resistance:
muscle lengthens (eccentric contraction)
Isometric contraction - skeletal muscle develops tension, but is prevented from changing length
44. Isotonic Contraction
45. Resistance and Speed of Contraction Are inversely related
The heavier the resistance on a muscle:
the longer it takes for shortening to begin
and the less the muscle will shorten
46. Muscle Relaxation After contraction, a muscle fiber returns to resting length by:
elastic forces: the pull of elastic elements (tendons and ligaments)
Expands the sarcomeres to resting length
opposing muscle contractions : antagonists
gravity
47. Muscle metabolism ATP is the only E source for contraction
mm only store ~2-4 seconds worth of ATP
3 main pathways for the regeneration of ATP
1. Creatine phosphate (CP)
2. Anaerobic glycolysis - breaks down glucose from glycogen stored in skeletal muscles
3. Aerobic respiration - of fatty acids in the mitochondria
48. ATP and CP Reserves Adenosine triphosphate (ATP):
the active energy molecule
Creatine phosphate (CP):
The storage molecule for excess ATP energy in resting muscle
Energy recharges ADP to ATP using the enzyme creatine phosphokinase (CPK)
49. Anaerobic glycolysis & lactic acid formation Remember…w/ initial phase of glycolysis 1 glucose molecule is divided into 2 pyruvic acid molecules and 2 ATP molecules are yielded
Remember…glycolysis occurs w/ or w/o oxygen (pyruvic acid or lactic acid)
With an oxygen deficit lactic acid is the main byproduct of glycolysis rather than carbon dioxide & water
50. Anaerobic glycolysis & lactic acid formation, cont. Anaerobic pathway yields only ~5% as much ATP as aerobic pathway but is occurs 2 ½ times faster
Glycolysis can provide enough ATP to sustain strenuous activity for 30-40 seconds
CP & Glycolysis together can provide enough E to sustain exercise for nearly a minute
51. Muscle Metabolism: Anaerobic Glycolysis When muscle contractile activity reaches 70% of maximum:
Bulging muscles compress blood vessels
Oxygen delivery is impaired
Pyruvic acid is converted into lactic acid
52. Aerobic respiration Provides up to 95% of the ATP used for mm activity w/ prolonged exercise…these reactions are collectively known as oxidative phosphorylation
Remember…it occurs in the mitochondria and yields 36 ATP per molecule of glucose
Can continue ‘indefinitely’ in the presence of oxygen…
When exercise demands (oxygen) exceed the ability of mm to carry out the reactions, glycolysis kicks back in…lactic acid build-up… muscle fatigue
Aerobic endurance- length of time a muscle can continue to contract using aerobic pathways
Anaerobic threshold- the point at which muscle metabolism converts to anaerobic glycolysis
Is ATP demands are kept below the anaerobic threshold moderate activity can continue for several hours in a trained individual
53. Muscle fatigue Definition- the physiological inability to contract
Different than psychological fatigue
Absence of ATP leads to contractures
i.e. writer’s cramp
No ATP available detach the cross-bridges
Intense exercise produces rapid muscle fatigue (with rapid recovery)
Na+-K+ pumps cannot restore ionic balances quickly enough
Low pH (lactic acid)
SR is damaged and Ca2+ regulation is disrupted
54. Oxygen debt Definition- the extra amount of oxygen to be taken in by the body to restore reserves of glycogen, ATP, and CP
Example
To run the 100 yard dash in 12 seconds your body would need ~ 6 L of oxygen for totally aerobic respiration. VO2 max (amt of oxygen delivered to & used by your mm) is ~ 1.2 L during that interval. The oxygen debt is then 4.8L which gets repaid by heavy breathing after exercise triggered by increased lactic acid in the blood.
55. The Cori Cycle The removal and recycling of lactic acid by the liver
Liver converts lactic acid to pyruvic acid
Glucose is released to recharge muscle glycogen reserves
56. Heat Production and Loss Only 30-40% of the energy released in muscle activity is useful as work
The remaining 60-70% is given off as heat
Dangerous heat levels are prevented by radiation of heat from the skin and sweating
57. Hormones and Muscle Metabolism Growth hormone
Testosterone
Thyroid hormones
Epinephrine
58. Muscle Performance Power:
the maximum amount of tension produced
Endurance:
the amount of time an activity can be sustained
Power and endurance depend on:
the types of muscle fibers
physical conditioning
59. 3 Types of Skeletal Muscle Fibers Fast fibers (white)- Have large diameter, large glycogen reserves, few mitochondria
Have strong contractions, fatigue quickly
Slow fibers (red)- Have small diameter, more mitochondria, contain myoglobin (red pigment, binds oxygen)
Have high oxygen supply
Intermediate fibers (pink)- Have more capillaries than fast fiber, slower to fatigue
Have low myoglobin
60. Fast versus Slow Fibers
61. Comparing Skeletal Muscle Fibers
62. Muscle Hypertrophy Muscle growth from heavy training:
increases diameter of muscle fibers
increases number of myofibrils
increases mitochondria, glycogen reserves
63. Structure of Cardiac Tissue Automaticity:
contraction without neural stimulation
controlled by pacemaker cells
Variable contraction tension:
controlled by nervous system
Extended contraction time
Prevention of wave summation and tetanic contractions by cell membranes
64. Characteristics of Cardiocytes Unlike skeletal muscle, cardiac muscle cells:
are small, branched & uninucleate
have short, wide T tubules
have SR with no terminal cisternae
are aerobic (high in myoglobin, mitochondria)
have intercalated discs
Are specialized contact points between cardiocytes
Join cell membranes of adjacent cardiocytes (gap junctions, desmosomes)
Because intercalated discs link heart cells mechanically, chemically, and electrically, the heart functions like a single, fused mass of cells
65. Smooth Muscle in Body Systems Found lining hollow organs
In blood vessels:
regulates blood pressure and flow
In reproductive and glandular systems:
produces movements
In digestive and urinary systems:
forms sphincters
produces contractions
In integumentary system:
arrector pili muscles cause goose bumps
66. Characteristics of Smooth Muscle Cells Long, slender, and spindle shaped
Have a single, central nucleus
Have no T tubules, myofibrils, or sarcomeres
Have no tendons or aponeuroses
Have scattered myosin fibers
Myosin fibers have more heads per thick filament
Have thin filaments attached to dense bodies
Dense bodies transmit contractions from cell to cell
67. Excitation–Contraction Coupling Actin & myosin are scattered in sarcoplasm
Free Ca2+ in cytoplasm triggers contraction
Ca2+ binds with calmodulin in the sarcoplasm
activates myosin light chain kinase
68. Regulation of contraction 30x longer to contract than skeletal mm
Can maintain contraction at 1% the E cost of skeletal muscle
ATP efficiency is very important to homeostasis
i.e. maintaining smooth muscle tone in arteries
Smooth muscle tone - Maintains normal levels of activity
Modified by neural, hormonal, or chemical factors
69. Regulation of contraction, cont. Neural regulation
The effect of a neurotransmitter on a smooth mm cell depends on the types of receptors on the sarcolemma ( + or - )
Ach in sk mm is always excitatory
Examples of neurotransmitters include Ach, epi/norepi
70. Regulation of contraction, cont. Local regulation
Some smooth mm cells have no nerve supply at all
Some respond to both neural & chemical stimuli
Examples include…hormones, lack of oxygen, rise in carbon dioxide, low pH
All either enhance or inhibit calcium ion entry into the sarcoplasm
71. Response to Stretch Smooth muscle exhibits a phenomenon called stress-relaxation response in which:
Smooth muscle responds to stretch only briefly, and then adapts to its new length
The new length, however, retains its ability to contract
This enables organs such as the stomach and bladder to temporarily store contents
Skeletal & cardiac muscle respond to stretch with a more forceful contraction
72. Length & tension changes Smooth mm can function normally from ~30% shorter to 30% longer than its resting length
It can also contract from twice its normal length to half of its normal (resting) length
This is a change of 150%!
73. Control of Contractions Subdivisions:
multiunit smooth muscle cells:
connected to motor neurons
visceral (single unit) smooth muscle cells:
not connected to motor neurons
rhythmic cycles of activity controlled by pacesetter cells
74. Characteristics of Skeletal, Cardiac, and Smooth Muscle