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Muscle Tissue • Muscle tissue is highly specialized to convert chemical energy into kinetic energy • Your movements occur through the coordinated contracting and relaxing of many muscles • When muscles contract (shorten) it causes a part of the body to move • 1) 2) 3) • There are 3 types of muscle cells Skeletal Smooth Cardiac Food moves through the intestines due to peristalsis of the smooth muscles • Your heart beats because of cardiac muscles • And your body moves because skeletal muscles pull on your bones 3 Basic Muscle Types • The cells of smooth muscle tissue are long and tapered at each end and have one nucleus • They are arranged in parallel lines, forming sheets • Are found in the walls of blood vessels, hollow internal organs, and in the iris of the eye • Contraction of these muscles is involuntary (without your control) • The smooth muscles contract slower but can remained contracted for an extended amount of time because they don’t fatigue easily • The cardiac muscle is unique to the heart and forms the walls • These cells are tubular and have bands of light and dark (striated), and have one nucleus • The muscle cells are branched, creating a netlike structure • Like smooth muscles, cardiac muscles contract involuntary • Skeletal muscles are also tubular and striated • the “meat” of our bodies are composed of these muscles • The contraction of these muscles is voluntary and is controlled by the nervous system • The bodies movements is due to over 600 skeletal muscles • The skeletal muscles have the following functions: –Supports the body by opposing the force of gravity allowing us to stand upright –Makes our body move –Helps maintain a constant body temperature by releasing heat when using energy –Protects the internal organs and stabilizes the joints • Unlike smooth and cardiac muscle cells, skeletal muscles are very long and have many nuclei which maintain the normal functions of these cells • They are usually referred to as fibers rather than cells because of their structure Cooperation • When muscles contract, they shorten • This means that muscles can only pull • The work of a muscle is done when it contracts and when it relaxes it is in a passive state • Muscles that allow motion come in pairs • For the action of each muscle, there is another muscle that does the opposite action Bundles of Fibers • Each muscle in the body lies along the length of a bone • A tough, heavy band of tissue, called a tendon, attaches each end of a muscle to a different bone • The long skeletal muscle fibers can be up to 20 cm in length • Muscle fibers are organized into many larger bundles • A muscle then consists of clusters of these bundles of muscle fibers • A layer of connective tissue wraps around each fiber • Another layer wraps around each bundle and another around the whole muscle itself • Blood vessels and nerves run between the bundles of muscle fibers • The blood provides the fibers with nutrients and oxygen required to power the contractions as well as removes cellular wastes • The nerves trigger and control muscle contractions • Most of the volume of a muscle fiber consists of many subunits called myofibrils • And each myofibril is made of even finer myofilaments Muscle Contractions • Muscle contractions involve the coordinated action of the two types of myofilaments, actin and myosin • A thin actin myofilament consists of two strands of protein molecules that are wrapped around each other • A thick myosin myofilament also consists of two strands of protein molecules wound around each other but is about 10 times longer • When a myofilament contracts, the heads of the myosin move first • Like flexing your hand at the wrist, the heads bend backward and inward • This moves them closer to their rodlike “backbone” and a bit in the direction of the flex • Because the heads are attached at this time to an actin myofilament, the actin is pulled along with the myosin heads • As each myosin head flexes one after the other, the myosin walks along the actin • Each step requires ATP to provide energy that repositions the myosin head before each flex • The sliding of actin past the myosin is part of the sliding filament model of the muscle contraction • The actin is anchored at one end of each myofilament at a position in the muscle tissue called the Z line • Because the actin is anchored like this, its movement pulls the Z line along with it • As the Z lines are pulled closer together, the plasma membranes to which they are attached to cause the entire muscle fiber to contract Aerobic Cellular Respiration • Aerobic cellular respiration provides most of a muscle’s ATP • The muscle fibers use glucose from fats and oxygen to produce ATP • The other products are carbon dioxide, water and heat • CO2 leaves the body at the lungs, water is absorbed, and the heat warms the body • About 2/3 of the heat that maintains a constant body temperature comes from the aerobic cellular respiration of the skeletal muscles throughout the body Role of Calcium • When a muscle is relaxed, its myosin heads are raised and ready but not attached to actin due to another protein called tropomyosin blocking the attachment site • For a muscle to contract the tropomyosin must be moved out of the way • Another protein called troponin binds to the tropomyosin to form a complex regulated by calcium concentration • When calcium concentration is low, tropomyosin prevents myosin from binding to actin • When calcium concentration is raised, the complex forms and is shifted away, allowing the binding of myosin and actin Muscles and Health • During active use, some muscles are contracting and others relaxing • Even when muscles appear to be at rest, their fibers are always contracting • This continuous low-level activity results in muscle tone • Muscle tone is important for maintaining posture • If all our muscles were to completely relax, our body would collapse • In general, the skeletal muscles are subject to fewer disorders compared to other organ systems • However they are vulnerable to injuries that result from sudden and intense stress placed on them and on tendons • Complete the description of the listed muscular system disorders • Muscles may also be impaired simply from lack of use, this is referred to as atrophy • Atrophy is a reduction in size, tone, and muscle power • If extreme atrophy occurs, the loss of muscle function is permanent • Exercise is important to strengthen muscles and allow them to use energy more efficiently • Create your own set of notes for slowtwitch fibers and fast-twitch fibers