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Skeletal Muscle Fibers

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Presentation on theme: "Skeletal Muscle Fibers"— Presentation transcript:

1 Skeletal Muscle Fibers
Skeletal Muscle Contraction Sliding filament theory Thin filaments of sarcomere slide toward M line, alongside thick filaments The width of A zone stays the same Z lines move closer together

2 Skeletal Muscle Fibers
Figure 10–8a Changes in the Appearance of a Sarcomere during the Contraction of a Skeletal Muscle Fiber.

3 Skeletal Muscle Fibers
Figure 10–8b Changes in the Appearance of a Sarcomere during the Contraction of a Skeletal Muscle Fiber.

4 Skeletal Muscle Fibers
Skeletal Muscle Contraction The process of contraction Neural stimulation of sarcolemma: causes excitation–contraction coupling Cisternae of SR release Ca2+: which triggers interaction of thick and thin filaments consuming ATP and producing tension

5 Skeletal Muscle Fibers
Figure 10–9 An Overview of Skeletal Muscle Contraction.

6 The Neuromuscular Junction
Is the location of neural stimulation Action potential (electrical signal) Travels along nerve axon Ends at synaptic terminal Synaptic terminal: releases neurotransmitter (acetylcholine or ACh) into the synaptic cleft (gap between synaptic terminal and motor end plate)

7 The Neuromuscular Junction
Figure 10–10a, b Skeletal Muscle Innervation.

8 The Neuromuscular Junction
Figure 10–10c Skeletal Muscle Innervation.

9 The Neuromuscular Junction
Figure 10–10c Skeletal Muscle Innervation.

10 The Neuromuscular Junction
The Neurotransmitter Acetylcholine or ACh Travels across the synaptic cleft Binds to membrane receptors on sarcolemma (motor end plate) Causes sodium–ion rush into sarcoplasm Is quickly broken down by enzyme (acetylcholinesterase or AChE)

11 The Neuromuscular Junction
Figure 10–10c Skeletal Muscle Innervation.

12 The Neuromuscular Junction
Action Potential Generated by increase in sodium ions in sarcolemma Travels along the T tubules Leads to excitation–contraction coupling Excitation–contraction coupling: action potential reaches a triad: releasing Ca2+ triggering contraction requires myosin heads to be in “cocked” position: loaded by ATP energy

13 The Neuromuscular Junction
Figure 10–11 The Exposure of Active Sites.

14 The Contraction Cycle Five Steps of the Contraction Cycle
Exposure of active sites Formation of cross-bridges Pivoting of myosin heads Detachment of cross-bridges Reactivation of myosin

15 The Contraction Cycle Figure 10–12 The Contraction Cycle.

16 The Contraction Cycle [INSERT FIG. 10.12, step 1]
Figure 10–12 The Contraction Cycle.

17 The Contraction Cycle Figure 10–12 The Contraction Cycle.

18 The Contraction Cycle Figure 10–12 The Contraction Cycle.

19 The Contraction Cycle Figure 10–12 The Contraction Cycle.

20 The Contraction Cycle Figure 10–12 The Contraction Cycle.

21 The Contraction Cycle Fiber Shortening Contraction Duration
As sarcomeres shorten, muscle pulls together, producing tension Contraction Duration Depends on Duration of neural stimulus Number of free calcium ions in sarcoplasm Availability of ATP

22 The Contraction Cycle Figure 10–13 Shortening during a Contraction.

23 The Contraction Cycle Relaxation Rigor Mortis Ca2+ concentrations fall
Ca2+ detaches from troponin Active sites are re-covered by tropomyosin Sarcomeres remain contracted Rigor Mortis A fixed muscular contraction after death Caused when Ion pumps cease to function; ran out of ATP Calcium builds up in the sarcoplasm

24 The Contraction Cycle Skeletal muscle fibers shorten as thin filaments slide between thick filaments Free Ca2+ in the sarcoplasm triggers contraction SR releases Ca2+ when a motor neuron stimulates the muscle fiber Contraction is an active process Relaxation and return to resting length are passive

25 The Contraction Cycle

26 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

27 ATP and Muscle Contraction
ATP and CP Reserves Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) The active energy molecule Creatine phosphate (CP) The storage molecule for excess ATP energy in resting muscle Energy recharges ADP to ATP Using the enzyme creatine phosphokinase (CPK or CK) When CP is used up, other mechanisms generate ATP

28 ATP and Muscle Contraction
ATP Generation Cells produce ATP in two ways Aerobic metabolism of fatty acids in the mitochondria Anaerobic glycolysis in the cytoplasm

29 ATP and Muscle Contraction
ATP Generation Aerobic metabolism Is the primary energy source of resting muscles Breaks down fatty acids Produces 34 ATP molecules per glucose molecule Anaerobic glycolysis Is the primary energy source for peak muscular activity Produces two ATP molecules per molecule of glucose Breaks down glucose from glycogen stored in skeletal muscles

30 ATP and Muscle Contraction

31 ATP and Muscle Contraction
Energy Use and Muscle Activity At peak exertion Muscles lack oxygen to support mitochondria Muscles rely on glycolysis for ATP Pyruvic acid builds up, is converted to lactic acid

32 ATP and Muscle Contraction
Figure 10–20 Muscle Metabolism.

33 ATP and Muscle Contraction
Figure 10–20a Muscle Metabolism.

34 ATP and Muscle Contraction
Figure 10–20b Muscle Metabolism.

35 ATP and Muscle Contraction
Figure 10–20c Muscle Metabolism.


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