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
Each muscle cell is a fiber

Functions of skeletal muscle:
◦ Produce movement
◦ Maintain posture & position
◦ Support tissues
◦ Guard entrances/exits
◦ Maintain body temp
◦ Store nutrients
Organization of Connective Tissues



Epimysium vs. perimysium vs.
endomysium
Blood vessels & enter perimysium;
arterioles supply endomysium
Nerve fibers penetrate through to
endomysium

Muscle fibers are large &

Sarcolemma surrounds sarcoplasm

multinucleate
Transverse tubules extend into
sarcoplasm to conduct impulses

Myofibril vs. myofilament

Myofilaments:
◦ Thin filaments (actin)
◦ Thick filaments (myosin)

Myofibrils contract to shorten muscle
fiber
Sarcomeres


Myofibrils arrange in sarcomeres
A bands (dark) contain thick & thin
filaments
◦ M line connects thick filaments

I bands (light) contain thin filaments
◦ Z line marks boundary of sarcomere

Thin filament contains twisted actin
strands
◦ Active sites bind to myosin
◦ Tropomyosin blocks active site at rest

Thick filament contains myosin
molecules
◦ Myosin heads form cross-bridges when
join thin filaments
Sliding Filament & Contraction

Sliding filament theory of contraction:
◦ I band gets smaller
◦ Zone of overlap gets larger
◦ Z lines move closer together
◦ A band width remains constant

Muscle fiber shortens & contracts,
pulling muscle

Nervous system & muscle fiber
connect at neuromuscular junction
◦ Examine Figure 10-11 (pg 292-293)

Excitation-contraction coupling
◦ Release of Ca+ causes troponin to open
active sites on actin

Contraction cycle
◦ Examine Figure 10-12 (pg 294-295)
◦ Formation & detachment of cross-bridges
Relaxation


Contraction continues until action
potential, Ca+, and/or ATP reserves
are gone
Muscle fiber returns to original length
Tension & Muscle Fibers

Max tension

No tension

More cross-bridges = more tension
◦ Large zone of overlap, thin filaments don’t
contact center of sarcomere
◦ Thick filaments contact Z lines, OR no
zone of overlap

Twitch = stimulus-contractionrelaxation sequence
◦ Latent period vs. contraction period vs.
relaxation period

Repeated stimulations: treppe, wave
summation, incomplete tetanus,
complete tetanus

Motor unit—all fibers controlled by a
motor neuron
◦ Recruitment adds more muscle fibers
Muscle Tone


Some motor units remain active &
provide muscle tone
Requires energy even at rest

Muscles use creatine phosphate & ATP
for energy
Aerobic Metabolism

Mitochondria use citric acid cycle &
electron transport chain to provide
95% of needed ATP
Anaerobic Metabolism

Glycolysis breaks down glucose from
glycogen stores
◦ Provides ATP during periods of high
muscle activity
◦ Lactic acid produced


Muscle fatigue: low oxygen, blood pH
Recovery—muscle fibers return to
pre-exertion condition
Types of Skeletal Muscle Fibers



Fast fibers vs. slow fibers vs.
intermediate fibers
Hypertrophy vs. atrophy
Anaerobic endurance vs. aerobic
endurance



Single nucleus, typically branched,
intercalated discs
Completely dependent on aerobic
metabolism
Have automaticity through pacemaker
cells

Found in sheets in many body systems

Cells spindle-shaped & nonstriated


Contract over wide range of lengths
(plasticity)
Multiunit vs. visceral smooth muscle