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Muscles & Motion
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Evolution of Movement 1) epitheliomuscular cells in Cnidarians
epithelial cells w/ contractile protein arrays (actin & myosin) 2) epitheliomuscular cells sank below surface into connective tissues and became muscle
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Vertebrate Skeletal Muscle
Bundles of muscle cells fuse together inside a covering of connective tissue Bundles of fused muscle cells form muiltinucleate muscle fibers The connective tissue covering extends past the muscle fibers to attach to bones = tendons
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Neuromuscular Junctions
CNS sends action potential down motor neuron Synaptic Vesicles release Ach (acetylcholine) Ach diffuses across synapse Ach binds membrane receptors & trigger action potential that spreads through muscle fiber along T-tubules T-tubules are in-foldings of cell membrane (signaling molecule/ cell communication essay topic)
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Sarcoplasmic Reticulum (SR)
Action Potential in T-tubule activates SR 1. SR releases Ca+ into muscle fiber 2. Ca+ binds to Troponin 3. Troponin moves Tropomyosin 4. Muscle contracts
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Lack of Action Potential
Sarcoplasmic Reticulum actively uptakes Ca+ Low Ca+ levels in muscle fiber makes Tropomyosin block myosin binding sites Muscles relax
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Sarcomeres: myofibril subunits
Joined at borders called Z line
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Sarcomeres: myofibril subunits
Each myofibril is made of many sarcomeres Sarcomeres contain Thick Myosin in the middle Thin Actin attached to Z line
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Regulatory Proteins Tropomyosin – blocks myosin binding sites on actin
Troponin complex – move tropomyosin out of the way so myosin can bind to the actin ….activated by Ca
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Myosin heads primed by ATP
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Binding site blocked by tropomyocin
Ca bonding to troponin Δ its shape Δ troponin moves tropomyocin out of binding site Myosin binds to actin
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Myosin releases ADP and P and bends toward center of sarcomere
Actin pulled toward center ATP binds myosin & resets myosin head
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