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THE MUSCULAR SYSTEM CHAPTER 8 Objectives • To explain the structure of muscle • To list various outcomes of muscular actions • Describe how connective tissue is part of a skeletal muscle • Name the major parts of a skeletal muscle fiber, and describe the function of each Introduction • Muscles are responsible for all types of body movement • Use chemical energy stored in nutrients to contract • muscle tone, propel body fluids and food, generate heartbeat, and distribute heat • Types: 1. Skeletal 2. Smooth 3. Cardiac Skeletal Muscle • Attaches to bones • Tendon: muscle to bone • Ligament: bone to bone • Conscious control • Come in antagonistic pairs: • flexor (bends a joint) and extensor (straightens a joint) • Contract and shorten Skeletal Muscle (cont.) • Composed of: • Skeletal muscle tissue • Nervous tissue • Blood • Connective tissue Connective Tissue Coverings • Fascia: layers of fibrous connective tissue that separates an individual skeletal muscle from adjacent muscles • Epimysium: layer of connective tissue that closely surrounds a skeletal muscle • Perimysium: extend inward from epimysium, separates muscle tissue into small compartments • Fascicles: bundles of skeletal fibers • Endomysium: thin covering of each fiber within a fascicle Skeletal Muscle Fibers • Single cell that contracts in response to stimulation, relaxes when stimulation ends. • myofibrils divided into sections called sarcomeres • Sarcomere • functional unit of muscle contraction • contain myofilaments (alternating bands of thin (actin) and thick (myosin) Thin Filaments (Actin) • Complex of proteins • Helix of actin molecules and tropomyosin fibers • Tropomyosin fibers secured with troponin molecules which block the spot where the myosin fiber will attach (must be moved for muscle contraction) Thick Filaments (Myosin) • Each thick filament consists of many myosin molecules • consist of head, neck and tail • head binds to actin molecules *Organization of filaments produces striations* Neuromuscular Junction • Motor Neuron stimulates muscle contraction • Neuromuscular junction: connection between motor neuron and muscle fiber • Nerve impulse reaches end of motor neuron axon, vesicles release neurotransmitter (acetylcholine) • Neurotransmitter received by receptors on muscle cell, contraction is then stimulated Animation Skeletal Muscle Contraction • Sliding Filament Theory • Sarcomeres shorten because cross-bridges pull on thin filaments • Thin filaments slide toward M line • Width of the A band remains the same • Z lines move closer together Steps of Contraction Step 1: Action Potential 1. Nerve action potential releases acetylcholine into synaptic cleft, opening Na+ channels 2. Action potential spreads across sarcolemma, releases Ca2+ into sarcoplasm Steps of Contraction (cont) Step 2: Myosin-actin binding 1. a. Upon stimulation, Ca2+ binds to receptor on troponin molecule b. Troponin-tropomyosin complex changes, exposing active site of actin 2. Myosin head attaches to actin using energy from ATP, forming a cross-bridge Steps of Contraction (cont.) Step 3: Power Stroke 1. Side arm pivots towards M line so actin and myosin slide by each other, shortening the sarcomere 2. ADP and P are released Steps of Contraction (cont.) Step 4: ATP Binding, Actin-myosin release 1. Myosin head binds another ATP molecule 2. Cross-bridges detach, releasing actin Steps of Contraction (cont.) Step 5: ATP Cleavage 1. ATPase splits ATP and captures released energy, detached myosin head is reactivated 2. Cycle will repeat if Ca2+ is still available Hmmmmm….. If a muscle is contracted, what happens if a new molecule of ATP is not available? Why does rigor mortis occur? Place your fingers along the angle of your jaw just in front of your ear. Grit your teeth and feel what happens. What muscle is contracting? Do Now: • Complete #’s 1-6 on the upper leg. Fill out the diagram and the function. Steps of Contraction (all together now!) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YAJ-9nPSqwA Rigor Mortis • Occurs 2-4 hours after death due to lack of ATP • Muscles remain contracted until the muscle tissue itself starts to deteriorate. TENSION PRODUCTION ◼ The all-or-none principle ◼ As a whole, a muscle fiber either contracts completely or does not contract at all NUMBER OF MUSCLE FIBERS ACTIVATED ◼ Recruitment (multiple motor unit summation) ◼ In a whole muscle or group of muscles, increasing tension is produced by slowly increasing the size or number of motor units stimulated MOTOR UNITS Figure 7-8 NUMBER OF MUSCLE FIBERS ACTIVATED ◼ 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 MUSCLE CONTRACTION ◼ A muscle fiber will contract after threshold stimulus has been reached. ◼ Once stimulated, the entire fiber completely contracts which is called the all-or-none response. ◼ *the extent of shortening depends on resistance. MYOGRAM ◼ Twitch: single muscle contraction ◼ Latent period: time between stimulation and response ◼ Period of contraction: muscle is contracted ◼ Relaxation: fiber returns to former length TYPES OF GRAPHS ◼ Twitch- full contraction ◼ Twitch summation (treppe)- stimulating the muscle before it completely relaxes ◼ Incomplete tetanus- minimal amt. of relaxation after each stimulus ◼ Complete tetanus- no relaxation, continuous calcium ion deposit Objectives (P. 3 2/17) • To identify the stages of contraction on a myogram • To discuss the role of ATP and cellular respiration in muscle fatigue • To compare and contrast hypertrophy and atrophy • To create dance/workout routines using anatomical terms of movement ATP AND MUSCLE CONTRACTION ◼ Sustained muscle contraction uses a lot of ATP energy ◼ Muscles store enough energy to start contraction ◼ Muscle fibers must manufacture more ATP as needed Do Now • Finish the muscles of the leg (functions and diagram) MUSCLE FATIGUE ◼ Cells undergo both aerobic and anaerobic respiration to supply ample atp (lactic acid fermentation) ◼ Lactic acid creates an oxygen debt because the liver cells must now use oxygen to break down the lactic acid (can take several hours) ◼ Lactic acid lowers the ph, which diminishes the muscle fibers response to stimulation ◼ More exercise = more glycolytic enzymes = increased capacity for glycolysis= increased capacity for aerobic respiration!! … start working out ☺ HYPERTROPHY VS. ATROPHY ◼ Hypertrophy- muscles respond to exercise and enlarge ◼ Slow twitch fibers activated by low intensity exercise such as swimming or running, develop more mitochondria and capillaries, prolonging fatigue ◼ Fast twitch fibers activated by weight lifting can produce new myofilaments & enlarge the muscle (they are still fatigable) ◼ Atrophy- when regular exercise stops, capillary networks shrink, mitochondria decrease, actin & myosin decrease, and muscle shrinks. TETANUS ◼ Caused by Clostridium tetani bacteria present in soil ◼ Bacteria produces a neurotoxin which blocks the release of inhibitory neurotransmitters. Muscle Workout/Dance Activity Your group must come up with instructions for a workout/dance routine that can be done in the classroom. You must include at least 3 muscles from each section that we covered. Write out the instructions for the next group. They will have to do your “dance” and try to guess which muscles you focused on! Happy Heart Day!!!