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Three types of vertebrate muscle
- Skeletal (voluntary movement, breathing)
- Cardiac (beating of the heart)
- Smooth (involuntary, movement of internal organs)
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All the vertebrate muscle use a ______ _____ ______ mechanism
sliding filament contractile mechanism
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_____ _____ cells are called muscle fibers and are large and _______.
- skeletal muscle
- multinucleate
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Skeletal muscles form from fusion of embryonic _______
myoblasts
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One skeletal muscle consists of many muscle fibers bundled together by _____ ____
connective tissue
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Contractile proteins:
- actin (thin filament)
- myosin (thick filaments)
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Each muscle fiber has several _______ (define)
myofibrils: bundles of actin and myosin filament
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How many actin filaments surround one myosin filaments
six
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Each myofibril consists of _____ (define)
sarcomeres: repeating units of overlapping actin and myosin filaments
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Each sarcomere is bounded by ______ which anchor actin
Z lines
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_____ & _____ allow no overlap of actin and myosin
H zone and I band
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Titin
largest protein in the body, runs the full length of the sarcomere
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Bundles of _____ filaments are held in the center of the ______ by titin
- myosin filaments
- sarcomeres
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When muscle contracts, ______ shorten and ______ pattern changes
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The _____ _____ _____ of muscle contraction depends on structure of actin and myosin molecules
sliding filaments model
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Myosin molecule has two ________ _______ coiled together, ending in a ________ head
- polypeptide chains
- globular
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Myosin filaments is many molecules in _______
parallel
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Actin filaments is _____ _____ in a long, twisited molecules
actin monomers
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________ twists around actin; _______ is attached at intervals
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Myosin heads can bind to specific sites on ____ molecules to form _____ _____. _____ changes conformation, causes _____ filament to slide 5-10nm
- actin
- cross bridges
- myosin
- actin
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Muscle cells are excitable meaning
can conduct action potentials
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Muscle contraction is initiated by action potentials from a _____ _____ at the _______ _____
- motor neuron
- neuromuscular junction
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Motor unit
all the muscle fibers activated by one motor neuron
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One muscle may have many _____ ____. To increase strength of muscle contraction we increase rate of _____ ____ ____ or _____ _____ _____ _____ fire
- firing of motor neurons
- recruit more motor neurons (more motor units activated)
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Action potentials in muscle fiber also travel deep within the cell. ______ (_____ ____) descend into the sarcoplasm (____ _____ _____)
- T tubles (transverse tubules)
- (muscle fiber cytoplasm)
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T tubules run close to the _____ _____ (define)
sarcoplasmic recticulum: a closed compartment that surrounds every myofibril
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How many proteins span space between t tubules and sarcoplasmic reticulum & are physically _______.
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The ________ receptor on the t tubule membrane is voltage sensitive. The _______ receptor in the sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane is a Ca++ channel
- dihydropyridine (DHP) receptor
- ryanodine receptor
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When an action potential reaches the dihydropyridine (DHP) it ______ ______. The ryanodine receptor then allows _____ to leave the _____ _____. ______ diffuses into the ______ and triggers interaction of _____ & ____ and sliding of filaments
- changes conformation
- Ca++
- sarcoplasmic reticulum
- Ca++
- sarcoplasm
- actin & myosin
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At rest Ca++ concentration is higher in the ________ than in the _______
- sarcoplasmic reticulum
- sarcoplasm
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Actin filaments also include _______ & _____
tropomyosin & troponin
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Troponin has ______ ______ what does does each bind to
three subunits:
- 1 binds to actin
- 1 binds to tropomyosin
- 1 binds to Ca++
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At rest, _________ blocks the binding on actin
tryopomyosin
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When Ca++ is released, it binds to ______, which _____ _____
- troponin
- changes conformation
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Troponin is bound to _____ and as ______ twists it exposes _____ ____ on actin
- tropomyosin
- tropomyosin
- binding sites
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When Ca++ pumps remove Ca++ from the sarcoplasm, _______ stops
contraction
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In skeletal muscle, the minimum unit contraction is a ____ which is measured in terms of ______ or ______ it generates. A single action potential generates a single _____. The force generated depends on how many fibers are in the ____ ____
- twitch
- tension or force
- twitch
- motor unit
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Tension generated by entire muscle depends on: (2)
- number of motor units activated
- frequency at which motor units are firing
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If ______ ______ are close together in time, the ____ are summed, tension ______ and they are recognized as a ____ ____
- action potential
- twitches
- increases
- single twitch
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Twitches sum because Ca++ pumps can not clear Ca++ from ______ before next _____ _____ arrives
- sarcoplasm
- action potential
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Tetanus (w/ respect to action potential):
action potential are so frequent there is always Ca++ in the sarcoplasm
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How long muscle fiber can sustain tetanic contraction depends on ____ ____. ____ is needed to break the _____-____ bonds and the recock the the myosin heads.
- ATP supply
- ATP
- actin-myosin bons
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To maintain contraction, _____-_____ ____ have to keep cycling
actin-myosin bonds
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_____-_____ _____ are oxidative or red muscle
slow-twitch fibers
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Slow-twitch fibers contain ______ which is an ______ binding protein, and has many ______. It is well supplied w/ blood vessels
- Myoglobin
- oxygen
- mitochondria
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Maximum tension in slow-twitch fibers develops _____ and is _____ resistant to fatigue
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Slow-twitch fibers have reserves of _____ and ____ that can produce _____ as long as ______ is available. Muscles with a high proportion of slow-twitch fibers are good for ______ work like distance jogging etc
- glycogen & fat
- ATP
- oxygen
- aerobic
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Fast-twitch fibers are ______ or _____ _____. They have _____ mitochondria, fewer _____ ______ and little or no _____.
- glycocytic or white muscle
- fewer
- blood vessels
- myoglobin
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Fast-twitch fibers develop _____ _____ faster but _____ more quickly. They also can't replenish ATP for ______ _____.
- maximum tension
- fatigue
- prolonged contraction
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Proportion of fast-and slow-twitch fibers in skeletal muscle is determined mostly by _____ _____. _____ can alter muscle properties to a certain extent.
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The _____ _____ of the sarcomeres determines how much force can be generated. If stretched, less overlap between actin & myosin fibers means fewer ____ ____ and less ____. If fully contracted, there is no more space for _____.
- resting length
- cross bridges
- force
- shortening
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Muscles have three systems for supplying ATP for contractions:
- Immediate system
- Glycolytic system
- Oxidative system
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Immediate system:
Glycolytic system:
Oxidative system:
Immediate system: uses preformed ATP and creatine phosphate
Glycolytic system: metabolizes carbohydrates to lactic acid and pyruvate
Oxidative system: metabolizes carbohydrates or fats to H2O and CO2
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Muscles contains _____ ______ which stores energy in a _____ bond that can be transferred to ADP
- creatine phosphate (CP)
- phosphate
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Immediate system = ____+_____. This system is exhausted within seconds
ATP+CP
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The glycolytic system enzymes are in the ______; ATP generated is then rapidly available to _____. Glycolysis alone is not very efficient because _____ _____ accumulates. Immediate and glycolytic systems provide energy for less than _____ _____
- sarcoplasm
- myosin
- lactic acid
- 1 minute
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Oxidative sytems produce large amounts of ____, but takes place in the ________. ____ must diffuse from the ______ to the ____. This makes this the _____ of the 3 systems
- ATP
- mitochondria
- ATP
- mitochondria
- myosin
- slowest
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Cardiac muscle is also ______, the cells are smaller than ______ muscle and have ____ nucleus
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Cardiac muscle cells also ______ & _____ so they can withstand _____ pressures
- branch and interdigitate
- high
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______ & ______ cells initiate and coordinate heart muscle contraction. The heartbeat is _____ which means it is generated by the _____. ______ nervous system modifies the rate of ______ cells, but is not necessary for their function
- pacemaker & conducting cells
- myogenic
- heart
- Autonomic nervous system
- pacemaker
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Smooth muscle is in most ____ ____ and is under the control of the ______ _____ ____. Smooth muscle cells are arranged in _____ and have electrical contact via ____ ______. As a result _____ ______ can spread from on cell to the next in the sheet
- internal organs
- ANS
- sheets
- gap junctions
- action potential
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Plasma membrane of _____ ____ cells is sensitive to stretch. Stretched cells ______ and fire ____ _____ which start contraction. This is important for ______.
- smooth muscle cells
- depolarize
- action potentials
- digestion
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Neural influences on smooth muscle comes from the _____. ______ in ______ ____ causes depolarization and action potentials, causing _____. _______ causes the same cells to ______ leading to fewer contraction.
- ANS
- ACh
- digestive tract
- contraction
- Norep.
- hyperpolarize
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Ca++ inlfux to sarccoplasm stimulated by ______, ______ or ______. Ca++ binds with ______ which activates _____ _____ which phosphorylates _____ ____; and can then bind and release actin
- stretching, action potentials, or hormones
- calmodulin
- myosin kinase
- myosin head
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