Concepts of Biology (BIOL116) - Dr. S.G. Saupe; Biology Department, College of St. Benedict/St. John's University, Collegeville, MN 56321; ssaupe@csbsju.edu; http://www.employees.csbsju.edu/ssaupe/ |
Muscles: Structure & Function
I. Muscle Structure
Muscles are comprised of bundles (fascicles) of muscle fibers (actually cells). The muscle fibers
are surrounded by connective tissue.
A. Muscle Fiber (cells)
- long (can run entire length of muscle)
- cylindrical
- multi-nucleate
- sarcolemma (=plasma membrane), sarcoplasmic reticulum (=endoplasmic reticulum), sarcoplasm (= cytoplasm)
- T-tubules inward extensions of the sarcolemma
- contains bundles of myofibrils
- organization summary: muscle (tissue) � fibers (cells) � myofibrils � myofilaments
B. Myofibrils
- threads that run through the muscle fibers
- made of actin and myosin myofilaments (or just filaments)
- myosin filaments thick; myosin (contractile protein); head and tail region; look like golf clubs
- actin filaments thin; actin (contractile protein; globular units, called G-actin, linked together to form a chain, called F actin; two chains intertwined); associated with regulatory proteins (tropomyosin, troponin complex) attached at intervals
- actin and myosin filaments overlap to form a sarcomere
- numerous sarcomeres are joined end-to-end to form a myofibril
C. Sarcomeres
- contractile units
- thick myosin filaments in middle region
- thin actin filaments toward outside
- distinctive striated structure of sarcomere due to overlapping of the thin (actin) and thick (myosin) filaments and attachment of adjacent sarcomeres. The following regions of the sarcomere can be seen (check diagram in text and/or website):
- Z-line (region where adjacent sarcomeres are attached through by joining their thin filaments);
- I band (lighter area with only thin filaments)
- H zone (central zone with only thick filaments)
- M line - dark area in the H zone, region where myosin tails are joined
- A band (regions where thick and thin filaments overlap)
II. Muscle Contraction
Muscles contract as the actin and myosin filaments slide past one
another. Note that the filaments do not decrease in length. Sliding requires energy that
is supplied by ATP. The myosin head of the thick filaments is the "business" end
of the process and contracts moving (like a ratchet) the thin filaments toward the middle
of the sarcomere. This is called the "Sliding Filament Model".
Let's see how
it works:
III. Muscle Relaxation
The muscle fibers return to their original position
IV. Regulation/Control
Skeletal muscles only contract when stimulated by a motor neuron.
Muscle fibers don't normally contract because the myosin binding sites are normally blocked by regulatory proteins
(troponin/tropomyosin complex). For contraction to occur, the
tropomyosin/troponin
complex must be moved out of the way. How does this work?
V. Energy Source for Contraction
VI. Graded Contraction
Here's a paradox we know that we can voluntarily alter the
extent and strength of a contraction (a graded response), BUT at the cellular level the
response is all-or-nothing. How are graded contractions generated? It is controlled by the
nervous system that:
VII. Cell Type - a refresher
Muscle cells: (a) are elongated; (b) excitable; and (c) can
contract. There are three major types of muscle cells/tissue:
VII. Cool Stuff
Study Tips:
The material described in this section is found in chapter
47. Anything in these notes are "fair game" for the exam. If it's in
the chapter but not in the notes, ignore it for the exam.
How to Study?
Come to class and get a great set of notes. Read the web
notes. Read the specific sections in the chapter related to the material in
class and in the web notes. Go through the pertinent section of the web site/CD
ROM. Now,
make a summary set of notes, combining the important elements from the four
sources of info (class, web, text, CD). So far, you haven't done any studying
� you've simply gathered information. Now, it's time to study! Go through the
summary set of notes asking yourself the "W" questions � what, why,
when, where, "w"how? Could you explain the material to someone else?
Could you teach this to someone who has never had the course? Test yourself by
going through the questions at the end of the chapter and in the CD-ROM. Make a
list of terms. Make a concept map. As an aside, as a rule-of-thumb you should be
studying about 2 hours for every hour in class.
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