+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Date post: 25-Feb-2016
Category:
Upload: jock
View: 41 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Muscles &Muscle Tissue. Chapter 9. Function of Muscles. Movement Posture Stabilization of Joints Thermogenesis (heat production). Functional Characteristics of Muscle. Excitability (irritability) Can receive and respond to stimuli. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Popular Tags:
53
Muscles &Muscle Tissue Chapter 9
Transcript
Page 1: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Chapter 9

Page 2: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Function of Muscles

• Movement• Posture • Stabilization of Joints• Thermogenesis (heat production)

Page 3: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Functional Characteristics of Muscle

• Excitability (irritability)– Can receive and respond to stimuli.

• Stimuli can include nerve impulses, stretch, hormones or changes in the chemical environment.

• Contractility – the ability to shorten with increasing tension.

• Extensibility – the ability to stretch.• Elasticity – the ability to snap back (recoil)

to their resting length after being stretched.

Page 4: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Three types of muscle

Skeletal Smooth Cardiac

Page 5: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Characteristics of Skeletal Muscle

• Striated• Multinucleate (it is a syncytium)• Voluntary• Parallel fibers

Page 6: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Arrangement of connective tissue in skeletal muscle

Page 7: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Muscle microstructure

Page 8: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Myosin

Page 9: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

A thick myofilament

Page 10: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

A thin myofilament

Made of actin, troponin and tropomyosin

Page 11: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Arrangement of myofilaments

Page 12: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

The sarcomere:the functional unit of skeletal muscle

Page 13: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Anatomy of a myofibril

Page 14: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Summary of skeletal muscle anatomy:muscles are made of fascicles

Page 15: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Fascicles are made of fibers, fibers are made of myofibrils

Page 16: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Fibrils are divided into sarcomeres,sarcomeres are made of myofilaments

Page 17: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Myofilamentsare made of

protein molecules

Page 18: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Muscle Contraction:the Sliding Filament Theory

• Muscle contraction requires:– Stimulus – the generation of an action

potential.– Crossbridge formation – interaction between

the thick and thin myofilaments. This is triggered by Ca++ ions released from the sarcoplasmic reticulum.

– Energy – ATP to energize the myosin molecules.

Page 19: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

T- tubules supply the stimulus,Sarcoplasmic Reticulum supplies the Ca++,

Mitochondria supply the ATP.

Page 20: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

The role of Calcium ions

Page 21: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Muscle contraction

Page 22: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Show the animation

Page 23: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Excitation-Contraction coupling

• Stimulus or excitation is required for muscles to contract.

• In skeletal muscle, the stimulus is from a motor neuron.

• The stimulus is in the form of an action potential.

• This action potential starts at the neuromuscular junction (NMJ).

Page 24: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

A neuromuscular junction (NMJ).

Page 25: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

The actual synapse

acetylcholine

Page 26: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Excitation-contraction coupling

Page 27: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Show NMJ animation

Page 28: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Motor units

Page 29: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Micrograph of an NMJ

Page 30: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

A Synapse

Synaptic vesicles

Page 31: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Myogram of a single muscle twitch

Page 32: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Comparative speed of different muscles

Page 33: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Graded Muscle Responses• The “twitch” describes just one fiber, it

really isn’t how muscles normally work.

• Muscles contract smoothly and respond to different levels of demand.

• This is accomplished through “graded responses”. There are two ways muscle responses are “graded”

Page 34: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Wave Summation•Wave summation is accomplished by repeated stimuli.•As the rate of stimulus delivery increases, there is less and less time for the fiber to relax between stimuli.•If the stimuli are rapid enough, the muscle fiber will contract completely and remain contracted until the stimulus stops of the muscle fatigues.•This is called tetanus (or tetany).

Page 35: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Recruitment

• Since action potentials are “all-or-none” responses, when a fiber is stimulated to tetany, it exerts maximum tension.

• To respond to stronger stimuli and thus increase the amount of tension, muscles will recruit more motor units until they reach maximal stimulus and all the motor units are recruited

• This continues until they either accomplish their task or fatigue.

Page 36: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Treppe

Page 37: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Types of contractions

• Isometric – means “same length”. Force is developed without measurable movement.

• Isotonic – means “same tension” movement is achieved with force or “tension” remaining constant.

Page 38: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Isotonic contraction: Concentric

Page 39: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Eccentric ContractionThis refers to the tension that is applied on a muscle as it lengthens.

Example: When you lower the dumbbell you just lifted, you don’t do so by allowing the muscle to just relax. Think about the consequences of that!

Eccentric contractions are about 50% more forceful than concentric ones.

Page 40: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Isometric Contraction

Page 41: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Energy physiology in skeletal muscle

Page 42: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Anaerobic Metabolism:

a losing proposition

Page 43: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Aerobic endurance

Page 44: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Anaerobic endurance

Page 45: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Fiber Types• Fast Glycolytic (fast twitch a or type IIB)

– few mitochondria, adapted for fast, powerful contraction, large diameter, little myoglobin (white fibers), few capillaries, fatigues rapidly

• Fast Oxidative (fast twitch b or type IIA)– many mitochondria, fast contraction,

intermediate diameter, lots of myoglobin & capillaries (pink fibers), moderately fatigue resistant

• Slow Oxidative (slow twitch or type I)– many mitochondria, slow contraction,

smallest in diameter, don’t hypertrophy, lots of myoglobin & capillaries, very fatigue resistant, red fibers

Page 46: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Stretch and tension

Page 47: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Stretch/Tension

Page 48: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

The Effect of Load on

Contraction

Page 49: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Smooth Muscle

Page 50: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Varicosities

Page 51: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Contraction of smooth muscle

Page 52: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Skeletal Smooth Diameter 10 - 100 m 3 - 8 m

Connective tissue Epi-, Peri- & Endomysium

Endomysium only

SR Yes, complex Barely, simpleT - tubules yes noSarcomeres yes noGap Junctions no yesvoluntary yes noNeurotransmitters Acetylcholine

(Ach)Ach, epinephrine, norepinephrine, et al

Regeneration Very little Lots, for muscle

Page 53: Muscles &Muscle Tissue

Future governors of Califorina?


Recommended