Shared Flashcard Set

Details

Week 9
Lecture 1
31
Anatomy
Undergraduate 2
10/30/2014

Additional Anatomy Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
What are the three structures that directly control muscle contraction?
Definition
1. the muscle itself
2. the nerve that supplies the muscle
3. the synapse between the muscle and nerve
Term
What does Huxley's Sliding Filament Theory explain?
Definition
how skeletal cells contract
Term
What does Huxley's Sliding Filament state?
Definition
muscle contraction is based on the shortening of sarcomeres throughout the skeletal muscle
Term
What are the contractile elements of a sarcomere?
Definition
thick filaments, thin filaments, calcium ions, and ATP
Term
Describe thick filaments.
Definition
multiple two-headed myosin molecules banded together
Term
What are thin filaments made of?
Definition
troponin, tropomyosin, and actin
Term
What are the stages of the contraction cycle?
Definition
1. relaxed muscle
2. action potential along nerve
3. cross-bridge attachment
4. power stroke
5. cross-bridge detachment
6. myosin head activation
7. return to relaxed state
Term
What happens during the relaxation stage of the contraction cycle?
Definition
-there is minimal filament overlap
-there is no action potential
-tropomyosin covers the myosin head binding sites
-myosin heads are active and holding ATP
-no Ca2+ is present in cytoplasm
Term
What happens during the action potential alon the nerve stage of the contraction cycle?
Definition
-action potential is sent along the nerve that innervates the muscle
-Ca2+ enters the cytoplasm
-Ca2+ binds with troponin and causes it to change shape
Term
What happens during the cross bridge attachment stage of the contraction cycle?
Definition
-tropomyosin is pulled away from myosin binding site on actin
-active myosin head binds with myosin binding site on actin
Term
What happens during the power stroke stage of the contraction cycle?
Definition
-energy from ATP is used to cause flexion and pivoting of the myosin head and tail
-pulls thin filament along thick filament
-sarcomere shortens
Term
What happens during the cross bridge detachment stage of the contraction cycle?
Definition
-power stroke stage is repeated to continue shortening the muscle
-ATP binds with myosin head and causes it to release
Term
What happens during the myosin head activation stage of the contraction cycle?
Definition
-myosin ATPase cuts ATP into ADP and inorganic phosphate and potential energy is then stored in myosin head
Term
What is motor nerve?
Definition
a structure that tells the skeletal muscle what to do and when to do it
Term
What is found on the nerve side of the neuromuscular junction?
Definition
-axon
-terminal bouton
-synapse
Term
What is significant about the axon of the motor nerve?
Definition
it comes directly from the spinal cord
Term
What does the terminal bouton contain?
Definition
-synaptic vesicles
-calcium channels
Term
What is significant about the synaptic vesicles in the terminal bouton?
Definition
they contain acetylcholine
Term
What is acetylcholine?
Definition
neurotransmitter that functions as a ligand
Term
What is significant about the calcium channels in the terminal bouton?
Definition
they are embedded in the plasma membrane of the nerve
Term
What is the synapse?
Definition
the area where nerve joins muscle; structures don't actually touch
Term
What is found on the muscle side of the neuromuscular junction?
Definition
-sarcolemma
-junctional folds
-acetylcholine receptors
Term
What is significant about the sarcolemma in regards to the neuromuscular junction?
Definition
it is the plasma membrane of skeletal muscle; forms the "motor end plate"
Term
What are junctional folds?
Definition
folds of the sarcolemma that increase the surface area
Term
What is the purpose of acetylcholine receptors?
Definition
found within junctional folds; act as receptors for acetylcholine
Term
What is the synaptic cleft?
Definition
the "space" between the nerve and muscle
Term
What does the action potential do?
Definition
causes a voltage change in the plasma membrane of terminal bouton
Term
What does the voltage change from the action potential cause?
Definition
the Ca2+ channels open to allow Ca2+ to enter the terminal bouton, causing:
-vesicle migration
-vesicles to fuse
-acetylcholine is released
Term
What does the acetlycholine release cause?
Definition
-crosses the synapse and binds with recepters
-sarcolemma generates graded potential
-wave of depolarization follows and causes an action potential
-acetylcholine is hydrolized
Term
Why do we want to remove acetlycholine?
Definition
if we didn't remove it, there would be a constant action potential always going
Term
What does excitation-contraction coupling explain?
Definition
when you excite a cell, a contraction WILL follow
Supporting users have an ad free experience!