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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