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Muscles Anatomy and their Function Patrick Allard, Sarah Ballard, Christopher Dakin, James Lavender, Brendan Takata, Melissa Tan, Duncan Walker, Ariel Ward, Stephanie Westendorp Function • Producing body movements • Stabilizing body positions • Regulating organ volumes • bands of smooth muscle called sphincters • Movement of substances within the body • blood, lymph, urine, air, food and fluids, sperm • Producing heat Outline • Muscle Anatomy • Sarcomere Anatomy • Different Proteins in a Muscle • Excitation • Movement • Excitation-Contraction coupling • Contraction • Relaxation Muscle Overview Myofibers Myofibrils & Myofilaments Filaments and the Sarcomere Myosin Actin Proteins of Muscle • • • Structure of NMJ Junction Action potential travels down axon of motor neuron and reaches axon terminal Action potential causes the release of synaptic vescicles (acetylcholine) through exocitosis Vesicles release acetylcholine into the synaptic cleft, which bind to the ach receptors on sarcolemma (motor end plate) • • • • Structure of NMJ Junction Binding causes channels to open and allows influx of Na+ into the muscle fiber Influx of Na+ makes the muscle fiber positively charged, causing an action potential to travel along the sarcolemma and into the transverse tubules Change in membrane potential of the transverse tubules triggers the release of Calcium ions by sarcoplasmic reticulum Calcium ions start Motor Unit Movement • Skeletal muscle spans a joint and is attached to bones by tendons at both ends. • • • Epimysium, perimysium, and endomysium extend beyond fleshy part of muscle to form tendon or aponeurosis. As muscle contracts, it creates a force either tension or compression, which is uniform across the muscle and tendon. One of the bones remains relatively fixed or stable while the other end Twitch Contraction Tension – Length Curve Excitation – Contraction Coupling ATP, ADP, Creatine Reaction Steps in Contraction Cycle Sliding Filaments Concentric Eccentric Isometric Isotonic and Isometric Contraction • • • • • • • Relaxation Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) breaks down ACh within the synaptic cleft Muscle action potential ceases Ca+2 release channels close Active transport pumps Ca2+ back into storage in the lateral sacs Calcium-binding protein (calsequestrin) helps hold Ca+2 in SR (Ca+2 concentration 10,000 times higher than in cytosol) Tropomyosin-troponin complex recovers binding site on the actin • • • • • • Steps to Cessation Cessation of muscle activity is caused by these stages: Stoppage of the efferent action potential leading to an inhibition of the release of acetylcholine into synaptic cleft Acetylcholinesterase breaks down the previously released acetylcholine allowing for its recycling Removal of acetylcholine from ligand gated ion channels in the motor end plate allow for its repolarization Repolarization of the motor end plate causes a change in the voltage gated ion channels of the sarcolemma allowing for its subsequent repolarization Repolarization of sarcolemma signals the end of the muscle fiber's stimulating action potential Steps to Cessation • Cessation of stimulating action potential stops release of calcium ions from the sarcoplasmic reticulum allowing for the calcium to be actively transported back into the sarcoplasmic reticulum and bound to calcequestrin • • • A decrease in the availability of free calcium in the muscle fiber cause troponin-tropomyosin complex to change shape and cover the myosin binding sites on actin molecule reducing the number of actively bound myosin crossbridges Decrease in actively bound cross-bridges allows for lengthening of the sarcomere, decreasing tension in the elastic connective tissue surrounding the fiber and muscle as a whole (parallel elastic components) which lowers the tension in the tendons of the muscle (series elastic components) Muscle tension lowers and under ideal conditions Excitation – Contraction Coupling Finish