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Define sarcolemma.
Plasma membrance of a muscle fiber
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Define sarcoplasm
cytoplasm of a striated muscle fiber
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Define myofiber.
Muscle fiber (muscle cell)
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Define sarcoplasmic reticulum.
Smooth ER in striated and smooth muscle fibers.
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Define motor unit.
A motor neuron and all the muscle fibers it innervates.
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What is a motor end plate?
- A specialized region of the sarcolemma
- Highly excitable
- Responsible for initiating the action potential that propagates across the myofiber causing the muscle contraction.
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What is the NMJ?
- neuromuscular junction
- the junction of the axon terminal of a motor neuron with the motor end plate
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Where in the spinal cord are motor neurons found?
Ventral horn.
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Name two important characteristics of the junctional folds.
- Found on the muscle fiber side of the NMJ
- There are different protein complexes at the crest and the bottom of the junctional folds.
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Explain the 6 steps of Excitation-Contraction Coupling.
- 1) Action potential generated by the NMJ is propagated along the sarcolemma and down the T-tubules
- 2) AP triggers Ca2+ release from terminal cisternae of SR
- 3) Ca2+ ions bind to troponin; troponin changes shape, removing the blocking action of tropomyosin; actin active sites exposed
- 4) Contraction; myosin cross bridges alternately attach to actin and detach, pulling the actin filaments toward the centre of the sarcomere; release of energy by ATP hydrolysis powers the cycling process
- 5) Removal of Ca2+ by active transport into the SR after the action potential ends
- 6) Tropomyosin blockage restored blocking actin active sites; contraction ends and muscle fiber releases
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What is botox?
- A toxin produced by the bacterium Clostridium botulinum.
- Inhibits Acetylcholine release by axon terminals
- Leads to botulism that causes muscular paralysis, respiratory failure, and eventual death.
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Describe Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD).
- In DMD, the link between the actin cytoskeleton and the basal lamina is lost.
- Muscle tissue is completely disrupted.
- There is an infiltration of macrophages, adipose tissue, and connective tissue.
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Name 7 characteristics of cardiac muscle.
- Found only in the heart where it forms a thick layer called the myocardium
- Pumps blood through the body
- Short and branched striated fibers
- One central nucleus per fiber
- Involuntary muscle
- Inherent rhythmicity
- T-tubules are much larger and deeper than in skeletal muscle
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What is an intercalated disk?
- Junctional complex found between two adjacent cardiac fibers
- Step-like pattern
- Has a transverse part and a lateral part
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What type of junctions are found in the transverse part of an intercalated disk?
Zonula adherens and desmosomes
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What type of junctions are found in the lateral part of an intercalated disk?
Gap junctions
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What is the main source of calcium for cardiac muscle?
ECM
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Where can smooth muscle be found?
Gastrointestinal tract, respiratory tract, and around blood vessels
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Name 5 characteristics of smooth muscle.
- Involuntary
- Non-striated, spindle-shaped, and tapered
- One central nucleus per fiber
- No T-tubules
- Fibers communicate via Gap junctions
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Explain how smooth muscle contracts.
- Thin filaments are arranged obliquely in the cell. Some attach to the dense bodies in the cytoplasm while others attach to dense plaques in the plasma membrane.
- Contractile units consist of myosin filaments connecting actin filaments to a dense body or dense plaque. They stretch across the cell between plaques.
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Describe the smooth muscle of the arteries and veins.
- Tunica media is made up of smooth muscle cells and elastic tissue - thicker in arteries compared to veins.
- Smooth muscle controls vessel diameter.
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Describe the smooth muscle of the intestine.
- Longitudinal layer: muscle fibers run parallel to the long axis of the organ
- Circular layer: muscle fibers run around circumference of the organ
- Longitudinal and circular layers participate in peristalsis.
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Describe the smooth muscle of the stomach.
Makes use of a longitudinal layer, a circular layer, and an oblique layer to acheive peristalsis
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