Excitation Contraction Coupling and Force Regulation

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49 Terms

1
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what is skeletal muscle innervated by?

motoneurons of somatic nervous system

2
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what is excitation-contraction coupling?

Process by which muscle AP causes rise of intracellular Ca2+ and actin-myosin interaction

3
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describe the structure of myofibrils

organised bundles of thick and thin filaments which generate contraction

4
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what are Ca2+ needed in muscle contraction?

to allow interaction between actin and myosin

5
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what is EC coupling?

when muscle action potentials (excitation) triggers a contraction (force generation and or muscle shortening)

6
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what do triads compose of?

a segment of T-tubule between 2 sacs of SR

<p>a segment of <strong>T-tubule</strong> between <strong>2 sacs of SR</strong></p>
7
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what is the role of triads?

Site of physical and functional contact between T-tubule and SR membranes

8
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what is the sarcolemma?

muscle cell membrane

9
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list the steps involved in EC coupling

knowt flashcard image
10
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how does Ca2+ go from SR to thin filamment?

diffusion

11
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what happens to Ca2+ upon relaxation?

pumped back into SR

12
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DHP receptor changes shape in response to ....?

AP

13
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what is DHP receptor?

a voltage sensor

14
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what causes a change of shape in RyR?

physical contact between DHP and RyR molecules

15
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what allows Ca2+ to exit SR and interact to myofilaments?

DHP receptor changes shape leads to RyR changing shape

<p>DHP receptor changes shape leads to RyR changing shape</p>
16
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what is steric blocking?

mechanism is what enables Ca2+ to operate the on-off switch

17
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what is the role of t-tubules in muscle contraction?

propagates APs deep into fibre

18
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what are the 3 membrane systems?

sarcolemma, t-tubules, SR

<p>sarcolemma, t-tubules, SR</p>
19
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what is a twitch?

a contraction that occurs in response to a single stimulus (AP)

20
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what does the speed of a twitch depend on?

the type of fibre

<p>the type of fibre</p>
21
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what do fast fibres shorten quicker?

because their myosin has a faster ATPase and therefore they can form more cross bridges per second

22
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what is the genetic cause of MH (Malignant hyperthermia/hyperpyrexia)

defective RyR or DHPR gene

23
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what is the problem with having a defective RyR or DHPR gene?

excessive Ca release when patients are exposed to gases like halothane

24
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what are effects of generaliased muscle contractions?

large rises of body temp, lactate release, acidosis, and release of K from muscle raising blood potassium

25
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slow (red) twitch fibres are what type?

I

26
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fast (white) twitch fibres are what type?

II

27
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comment on the Fatigue Resistance of type 1 muscle fibres

high resistance

28
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comment on the Fatigue Resistance of type 2 muscle fibres

moderate - low resistance

29
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which type of twitch muscle holds a higher no of mitochondria?

type 1

30
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which type of twitch muscle has a higher capillary density?

type 1

31
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a high jumper would mainly have what type of fibre?

type 1 (fast/red)

<p>type 1 (fast/red)</p>
32
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a marathon runner would mainly have what type of fibre?

type 2 (slow/white)

<p>type 2 (slow/white)</p>
33
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what is tetanus?

mechanical response to multiple stimuli/APs

34
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when does summation occur in muscle contraction?

when twitches occur in quick succession and overlap

<p>when twitches occur in <strong>quick succession</strong> and <strong>overlap</strong></p>
35
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what is fused tetanus?

Rapid stimulation resulting in no muscle relaxation

<p>Rapid stimulation resulting in <strong>no muscle relaxation</strong></p>
36
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how many times higher is the forced produced by fused tetanus compared to a twitch?

3-5x

37
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what is rate recruitment?

method to regulate muscle force- the rate at which AP fires

38
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more Ca2+ = ?

more contraction + more force

39
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A single AP will case a twitch contraction to last how long?

100- 300ms

40
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what does a high frequency stimulation result in?

complete fusion of contractile response – a fused tetanus

41
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each single muscle fibre is innervated by ...?

1 motoneuron

<p>1 motoneuron</p>
42
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what is the MU?

motor unit

43
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what does the motor unit consist of?

motoneuron, axon and all the muscle fibres it innervates

<p>motoneuron, axon and all the muscle fibres it innervates</p>
44
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what 2 factors determine the size of a MU?

number of muscle fibres and their diameter

45
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the force output of a muscle is _____ _____ to its fibre cross-sectional area

directly proportional (larger diameter=more force)

46
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What is motor unit recruitment?

increasing the number of active motor units

47
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what is muscle hypertrophy?

increase in muscle size

<p>increase in muscle size</p>
48
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what MUs are recuited first?

smallest MUs e.g.

49
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what type of twitch fibre is low force fatigue resistant?

slow twitch type 1, low force fatigue resistant fibres (slow twitch type I)