function depends on structure

39
Function depends on structure

Upload: jordan-morrow

Post on 30-Dec-2015

48 views

Category:

Documents


5 download

DESCRIPTION

Function depends on structure. Muscle classification Striated muscle Skeletal Muscle - voluntary muscles that allow for movement Cardiac Muscle - heart - specialized, involuntary Non-striated muscle Smooth Muscle such as blood vessels, digestive tract, internal organs, involuntary. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Function depends on structure

Function depends on structure

Page 2: Function depends on structure

Muscle classification

1. Striated muscle

A. Skeletal Muscle - voluntary muscles that allow for movement

B. Cardiac Muscle - heart - specialized, involuntary

2. Non-striated muscle

Smooth Muscle such as blood vessels, digestive tract, internal organs, involuntary

Page 3: Function depends on structure

Muscle functions

Muscle perform four import functions:

1. Produce movement

2. Maintaining posture

3. Stabilizing joints

4. Generating heat

Page 4: Function depends on structure

Functional characteristics of muscles

Excitability (irritability): the ability to receive and respond to a stimulus

Contractility: the ability to shorten forcibly when adequately stimulated

Extensibility: the ability to be stretched or extended

Elasticity: the ability of a muscle fiber to resume its resting length after being stretched.

Page 5: Function depends on structure

Sarcomere: the contractile unit of a myofibril

contains actin thin filament and myosin thick filament

Page 6: Function depends on structure

I band A band I band

Cross bridge

Thick filament Thin filament

Fig. 8-4, p.317

Page 7: Function depends on structure

Contraction of sarcomeres-sliding-filament theory

muscle contraction- sarcomeres shorten, actin and myosin move past each other and increase overlap between actin and myosin.

muscle stretched- Sarcomeres elongate. Reduce overlap between actin and myosin.

Note: Length of thick (myosin) and thin (actin) filaments remains constant.

Page 8: Function depends on structure
Page 9: Function depends on structure

Length-tension relation

Total tension is proportional to the total number of cross-bridges (overlap) between actin and myosin filamentsIdeal resting length: generate maximum force.Overlap to small: few cross-bridges can attach.No overlap: no cross-bridges can attach to actin.

Page 10: Function depends on structure

3 pairs of molecules:

1. myosin heavy chains

2. essential light chains

3. regulatory light chains

Page 11: Function depends on structure

G-actin polymerize F-actin (filamentous)

Actin - thin filaments1. comprised of protein dimers linked in "chains"2. each actin monomer has a myosin binding site3. thin filaments are anchored at one end to "Z-line" proteins4. thin filaments are free at other end5. "sarcomere" is the name for unit between "Z-lines"

Page 12: Function depends on structure

Troponin is a complex of 3 protein subunits:

Troponin C binds Ca 2+

Troponin T binds tropomyosin

Troponin I binds both actin & tropomyosin

Page 13: Function depends on structure

Troponin C binds Ca 2+

Troponin T binds tropomyosin

Troponin I binds both actin & tropomyosin

Page 14: Function depends on structure

Transduction of chemical to mechanical energy in muscle causes the filaments to slide:

Partial rotation of the actin-bound myosin head.

Cross-bridge chemistry

1. Attachable

2. Revisable

Page 15: Function depends on structure

neuromuscular junctions Each muscle cell is directly innervated by the terminal branch of a motor neuron. The contact between nerve and muscle occurs at a small specialized spot termed the neuromuscular junction (NMJ).

Page 16: Function depends on structure

Transverse tube (T tube not Z disk): transmit excitation into muscle fibers

Frog Crab

Page 17: Function depends on structure

Sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR): Ca2+ is stored and released as free Ca2+ during excitation-contraction

Page 18: Function depends on structure

Calsequestirin: Ca2+ binding protein in SR

Ca2+/Ma2+ pump (ATPase): proteins in SR actively transport Ca2+ ions (requires ATP).

Page 19: Function depends on structure
Page 20: Function depends on structure
Page 21: Function depends on structure
Page 22: Function depends on structure
Page 23: Function depends on structure

Ca++ regulationa. neural activation >> muscle is electrically excited >> AP

AP ionic currents reach SR, open voltage sensitive Ca++ channelsCa++ rushes out of SR, binds to troponin C, actin-myosin permitted to interact >> contraction

b. AP stops, voltage sensitive Ca++ channels close, Ca++ rapidly pumped into SR, tropomyosin returns, actin-myosin interactions blocked >> relaxation

c. Ca++ is sequestered (pumped and stored) in Sarcoplasmic Reticulum (SR)

- SR is the endoplasmic reticulum of muscle cells- SR is intracellular Ca++ store

d. Ca++ is actively pumped into SR from muscle cytoplasm

Page 24: Function depends on structure

Ryanodine receptor: located on SR membrane

Dihydropyridine receptor: located on T tubule membrane, no or little Ca2+ passes through in skeletal muscle.

Releasing Ca2+ from SR into the myoplasm depends

1. interaction of activated dihydropyridine receptor and ryanodine receptor-plunger model

2. Calcium-induced calcium release

Page 25: Function depends on structure

Mechanisms of Contraction• AP travels down the motor neuron to bouton.• VG Ca++ channels open, Ca++ diffuses into the

bouton.• Ca++ binds to vesicles of NT.• ACh released into neuromuscular junction.• ACh binds onto receptor.• Chemical gated channel for Na+ and K+open.

Page 26: Function depends on structure

Mechanisms of Contraction• Na+ diffuses into and

K+ out of the membrane.

• End-plate potential occurs (depolarization).

• + ions are attracted to negative membrane.

• If depolarization sufficient, threshold occurs, producing AP.

Page 27: Function depends on structure

Mechanisms of Contraction

• AP travels down sarcolema and T tubules.

• Terminal cisternae release Ca++.

Page 28: Function depends on structure

Mechanisms of Contraction

• Ca++binds to troponin.

• Troponin-tropomyosin complex moves.

• Active binding site on actin disclosed.

Page 29: Function depends on structure

Sliding Filament Theory• Sliding of filaments is produced by

the actions of cross bridges.• Cross bridges are part of the myosin

proteins that form arms that terminate in heads.

• Each myosin head contains an ATP-binding site.

• The myosin head functions as a myosin ATPase.

Page 30: Function depends on structure

Contraction• Myosin binding site splits ATP to ADP and

Pi.• ADP and Pi remain bound to myosin until

myosin heads attach to actin.• Pi is released, causing the power stroke to

occur.

Page 31: Function depends on structure

Contraction

• Power stroke pulls actin toward the center of the A band.

• ADP is released, when myosin binds to a fresh ATP at the end of the power stroke.

• Release of ADP upon binding to another ATP, causes the cross bridge bond to break.

• Cross bridges detach, ready to bind again.

Page 32: Function depends on structure

Contraction• ACh-esterase degrades ACh.• Ca++ pumped back into SR.• Choline recycled to make more ACh.• Only about 50% if cross bridges are

attached at any given time.– Asynchronous action.

Page 33: Function depends on structure

Contraction

• A bands:– Move closer together.– Do not shorten.

• I band: – Distance between A bands of successive sarcomeres.– Decrease in length.

• Occurs because of sliding of thin filaments over and between thick filaments.

• H band shortens.– Contains only thick filaments.

Page 34: Function depends on structure
Page 35: Function depends on structure

Regulation of Contraction

• Regulation of cross-bridge attachment to actin due to:

– Tropomyosin.

– Troponin.

Page 36: Function depends on structure

Role of Ca++

• Relaxation:– [Ca++ ] in sarcoplasm low when

tropomyosin block attachment.

– Ca++ is pumped back into the SR in the terminal cisternae.

– Muscle relaxes.

Page 37: Function depends on structure

Role of Ca++ in Muscle Contraction

• Stimulated:• Ca++ is released from

SR.• Ca++ attaches to

troponin• Tropomyosin-troponin

configuration change

Page 38: Function depends on structure
Page 39: Function depends on structure

Two major processes require ATP in muscle contraction:

1. Hydrolysis ATP by myosin (70-80%)

2. Pumping of Ca2+ back into SR (20-30%)