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Muscles
muscle fibers
35
Pharmacology
Professional
12/19/2011

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Term
Which muscles are striated?
Definition
Skeletal and cardiac muscles. Contain Sarcomeres.
Term
Which muscles are autonomic?
Definition
Smooth, cardiac muscle
Term
What features are similar between all muscle fibers?
Definition
Have elongated cells, require actin and myosin
Term
What are the three layers of a skeletal muscle and what do they wrap?
Definition
Epimysium (wraps muscle), Perimysium (wraps fascicle), and endomysium (wraps fiber)
Term
How is a skeletal muscle fiber/cell divided up?
Definition
into myofibrils, and then microfilaments. Also contains mitochondria and satellite cells (repair injury). A sarcomere is from Z band to Z band. Sarcolemma - cell membrane
Term
Why is Titin more present in skeletal muscles
Definition
Skeletal muscles stretch more, have to be more distensible.
Term
What is on a myosin head?
Definition
A binding site for ATP, ATPase, and a binding site for actin. Myosin makes up thick filaments. ATP necessary for contraction.
Term
What covers the binding site for myosin?
Definition
Troponin complex, which regulates tropomyosin. TnI binds to actin/TnT binds to tropomyosyn/TnC binds calcium. Smooth muscle has no troponin. Actin makes up thin filaments.
Term
How is calcium delivered to a skeletal muscle?
Definition
Sarcolemma folds in to form a T-tubule that runs into the cell to form a triad (terminal cisternae, T-tubule, terminal cisternae of SR). Action potential travels down T-tubule, L-channel on T-tubule changes configuration of RyR on SR to release calcium.
Term
What is a double zipper?
Definition
Another name for a triad. Membrane depolarization opens L-Calcium channels. Calcium releases and binds to TnC --> contraction. Internal calcium is absolutely necessary for skeletal muscle contraction
Term
How is excess calcium disposed of?
Definition
When an AP becomes positive, Ca-release channel closes and Calsequestrin reuptakes calcium
Term
How does sliding filament work?
Definition
Calcium binds to TnC, then TnT will move tropomyosin. Myosin then binds to actin, pulling towards center of sarcomere using ATP hydrolysis. ATP required for release. Active transportation of Ca back to SR
Term
How do the bands change in the sliding filament theory?
Definition
The H zone disappears, I band gets smaller. A band does not change.
Term
How do neurons affect muscle contraction?
Definition
N(m) junctions - vesicles containing acetylcholine. Ca allows vesicles to fuse, disperse across cleft. Ach activates receptor to allow sodium influx --> depolarization. Binds to alpha1 subunit in Ach receptor
Term
What is the MIR site on an Ach receptor?
Definition
main immunogenic region. Where antibody binds, endocytosis of receptor. Leads to M. gravis. Not the same as Ach binding site.
Term
What is the result of depolarization of a muscle cell?
Definition
Na concentration outside, K concentration inside. Ach binds, Na comes into cell and inside becomes positive/outside negative in a wave. K efflux to repolarize.
Term
What is the anatomy of a cardiac muscle?
Definition
Not as long/branched, less nuclei/more mitochondria. Only endomysium, no perimysium/epimysium. Intercalated disc = gap junctions and desmosomes. Contract as synctium - one whole muscle. Have T tubules and SR, Actin/Myosin/troponin. Needs extracellular calcium for CICR, no triad/NMJ
Term
How does the heart get calcium?
Definition
Extracellular calcium REQUIRED for contraction. Majority through L-channel in Sarcolemma, some RyR/SERCA. Ca removed mostly SR, less through sarcolemma. Calcium influx through L-channel, goes to RyR to release more Ca. Ca influx closes Ryr, efflux through SERCA and NCX
Term
What is required for cardiac energy metabolism?
Definition
Get ATP from lipids or carbs, NADH reduced to NAD+ to convert ADP to ATP. Get more total ATP yield from fats but requires more oxygen. Fatty acid --> Acyl CoA, carnitine needed from transport. Fatty acid byproduce NADH inhibits glycolysis
Term
Involuntary contraction of a cardiac cell
Definition
L-channel opens, calcium influx. Calcium goes to RyR on SR, calcium induced calcium release --> contraction. Also NE binds to B1, increase cAMP, active pKA. Increased calcium.
Term
Relaxation of a cardiac muscle
Definition
Calcium presence turns off RyR. Kinase A phosphorylates PLB to turn on SERCA, reuptake of Ca on SR. Ca/NaX on membrane. Also Ach binds to M2 receptor --> closes L-channels, K efflux, inhibits cAMP/pKa.
Term
What are characteristics of smooth muscle?
Definition
Makes up walls of hollow organs. No troponin, only calmodulin. MLCK acts on ATP. No T-tubules/NMJs. Contain dense bodies. Multiunit or unitary/visceral
Term
How does calcium increase in smooth muscle?
Definition
Entry through voltage gated L-channels, CICR of from the SR using IP3. If there is a depletion in Ca, entry through voltage-independent channels
Term
What is the difference in smooth muscle between single unit and multi-unit cells?
Definition
Unitary cells connected by gap junctions, allowing calcium flow and functioning with automaticity. Multiunits innervated by an autonomic nerve, found in iris and ciliary body.
Term
How does calcium stimulate contraction in smooth muscle cells?
Definition
NE or Ach binds to Alpha-1 or M3 --> L-channel opens, calcium induced calcium release, calcium binds to calmodulin --> complex phosphorylates MLCK. Increased calcium also from GPCR (IP3/DAG)
Term
How is smooth muscle relaxed?
Definition
B2 (Albuterol) and cAMP activates a GPCR, decreases intracellular calcium. cAMP inhibits MLCK, so no actin action. Ach binds to M3 --> IP3 pathway - nitric oxide converts GTP to cGMP --> decreases calcium
Term
What are the different bands/lines in a sarcomere?
Definition
An A band is mostly myosin with overlapping actin. M line- where myosin attaches. H zone - no overlapping actin. I band - actin and titinin. Z-disc - actinin
Term
What is cardiac hypertrophy?
Definition
An increase in the # of sarcomeres, not an increase in # of cells.
Term
How does the diameter of a myelinated fiber affect conduction?
Definition
Larger diameter = faster conduction
Term
What Channels are on the sarcolemma?
Definition
- The L-channel for calcium
-The sodium/potassium ATP pump (Sodium influx, potassium efflux)
- The calcium/sodium exchanger (usually calcium in, sodium out)
Term
What channels are on the sarcoplasmic reticulum?
Definition
The RyR receptor (calcium into cell), and SERCA (requires ATP for calcium reuptake)
Term
What happens if there is too much calcium in the cardiac cell?
Definition
Taken up into mitochondria.
Term
What are the sources of energy in cardiac muscle?
Definition
Fatty acids majorly, glycolysis minorly. Fatty acids yield more ATP, Glucose more efficient. Need carnitine for fatty acid transport into mitochondria.
Term
What function does NADH serve?
Definition
reducing equivalent required for ATP formation. NADH inhibits PDH/citric acid cycle in high concentrations.
Term
Which types of muscle has gap junctions?
Definition
Cardiac and smooth
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