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out of the 3 muscle types, which one makes up most of the body's weight?
skeletal
cardiac muscle is only found in the:
heart
skeletal muscle controls _____ movement
voluntary
is skeletal muscle striated?
yes
smooth muscle controls _____ movement
involuntary
is smooth muscle striated?
no
cardiac muscle controls ____ movement of the heart
involuntary
is cardiac muscle striated?
yes
organization of skeletal muscle from largest to smallest
1. whole muscle
2. fascicle
3. muscle fiber/cell
4. myofibril
5. sarcomere
6. thick and thin filaments
extension of membrane through muscle cell
T-tubules
surrounds T-tubules and myofibrils
sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR)
functional unit of muscle shortening
sarcomere
Draw a sarcomere and label the following: Z-line, M-line, A band, H band, I band, and thick and thin filaments.
.
sarcomeres arranged in series result in a
fast twitch
sarcomeres arranged in parallel result in a
stronger force, slower twitch
what are thin filaments made of
actin, troponin, tropomyosin
what are thick filaments made of
myosin, cross-bridges (actin binding sites, ATP binding sites, light chains)
consists of one motor neuron and all the muscle fibers it innervates
motor unit
motor unit recruitment starts with the (weakest/strongest) one
weakest
mechanical response of a muscle fiber to a single action potential
twitch response
- muscle begins to contract right away
- latent period is very short
- results in a change in TENSION, no change in muscle length
isometric twitch
- latent period is longer
- returns to resting load before tension fully goes away
- results in a change in muscle LENGTH
isotonic twitch
t/f: the larger the load, the longer the latent period
t
what does the slope of a twitch response represent?
shortening velocity (distance shortened/time)
the smaller the load, the ____ the latent period, the ____ the slope
shorter, higher
list all 16 steps of excitation-contraction coupling
.
ATP causes the cross-bridge to (flex/unflex)
unflex
roles of ATP hydrolysis by Na/K-ATPase in the plasma membrane
- maintains Na/K gradients
- allows membrane to produce/propagate APs
roles of ATP hydrolysis by Ca2+ ATPase in SR
- provides energy for active transport of calcium ions into SR
- lowers cytosolic Ca+ to prerelease contractions
- ends contraction
- allows muscle fiber to relax
roles of ATP hydrolysis by myosin-ATPase
- energizes cross-bridges
- provides energy for force generation
roles of binding of ATP to myosin
- dissociates cross-bridges bound to actin
- allows cross-bridges to repeat cycle of activity
the muscle spindle senses what stimulus?
muscle stretch/speed
the muscle spindle activates which afferent fiber?
1a
the muscle spindle results in
muscle contraction
the muscle spindle avoids what?
over-stretching
what part of the muscle spindle is highly contractile, exerts force, regular muscle
extrafusal skeletal muscle fiber
what part of the muscle spindle is low contractile, doesn't exert force, and maintains sensitivity of the muscle spindle?
intrafusal muscle spindle fiber
the Golgi tendon organ senses what stimulus?
tendon stretch
the Golgi tendon organ activates what afferent fiber?
1b
the Golgi tendon organ results in what?
muscle relaxation
this sensory afferent relieves tension
Golgi tendon organ
force exerted on an object by a contracting muscle
tension
force exerted on the muscle by an object
load
when the muscle develops tension
contraction
muscle changes length, load remains constant
isotonic contraction
concentric isotonic contraction
shortening
eccentric isotonic contraction
lengthening
t/f: muscle shortens as tension increases
t
muscle develops tension, but doesn't shorten/lengthen
isometric contraction
what are the 3 different parts of the 3-element model? (Hill's muscle model). draw and label
- CE: contractile element (sarcomeres)
- PE: parallel elasticity (titin, muscle membrane, connective tissue)
- SE: series elasticity (tendons)
which summation:
- muscle fiber restimulated after it has completely relaxed
- 2nd twitch is the same magnitude as the first twitch
no summation
which summation:
- Muscle fiber restimulated before it has completely relaxed
- Second twitch is added on to first twitch
twitch summation
which summation:
- Muscle fiber is stimulated so rapidly that it doesn't have an opportunity to relax between stimuli
- Reaches maximal sustained contraction
- Stimulation eventually ceases or fatigue begins
tetanus
at 100% maximal titanic tension and ideal resting length,
all head groups are energized and have access to a thin filament
t/f: as contraction increases, marginal return decreases
t
- bigger muscle cells
- triggered by micro tears induced by proper weight training
hypertrophy
hypertrophy that results in bigger and stronger muscle cells
myofibrillar
hypertrophy that only results in bigger muscle cells
sarcoplasmic
- more muscle cells
- typically doesn't occur with weight training
hyperplasia
list the factors the determine muscle tension (6 total)
tension development by each fiber:
- AP frequency (frequency-tension relation)
- fiber length (length-tension relation)
- fiber diameter
- fatigue
number of active fibers:
- # of fibers per motor unit
- # of active motor units
decline in muscle tension as a result of previous contractile activity
muscle fatigue
what eventually happens to tension as a muscle fiber is repeatedly stimulated?
tension eventually decreases even though stimulation continues
name 2 characteristics of a fatigued muscle
- decreased shortening velocity
- slower rate of relaxation
t/f: out of all the cells in our body, the rate of ATP breakdown increases the most from one moment to the next in skeletal muscle fiber
t
t/f: small preformed atp supply would only support a few twitches
t
what supports the first 15 seconds of contractile activity?
creatine phosphate
sustained contraction requires what?
oxidative phosphorylation and/or glycolysis
name the 3 muscle fiber types
slow-oxidative (type 1), fast-oxidative-glycolytic (type 2a), fast-glycolytic (type 2x)
which muscle fiber has: low-myosin ATPase, high oxidative capacity
slow-oxidative/type 1
which muscle fiber has: high myosin ATPase-activity + high oxidative capacity + intermediate glycolytic capacity
fast-oxidative-glycolytic/type 2a
which muscle fiber has: high myosin-ATPase activity + high glycolytic capacity
fast-glycolytic
of the 3 muscle fibers, which takes the longest to fatigue?
slow-oxidative/type 1
of the 3 muscle fibers, which fatigues the most rapidly?
fast-glycolytic/type 2x
of the 3 muscle fibers, which one is recruited first?
slow-oxidative/type 1
if load > tension, the muscle (shortens/lengthens)
lengthens
if tension > load, the muscle (shortens/lengthens)
shortens