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9 Muscles and movement I: Where hath all my skin gone? MUSCLE STRUCTURE SLIDING FILAMENT THEORY (or, 6[ish] easy steps to contraction) 3 TESTS OF THE SLIDING FILAMENT MODEL 1 Office hours today shifted: 3:30-4:30 Practice exam soon PK submission Quick Quiz 2 Estrogen Estrogen promotes osteoclast death (apoptosis) High estrogen levels at puberty are associated with epiphyseal closure and decreased bone turnover. Q: Why might spayed female cats have long legs? Low estrogen levels are associated with increased bone turnover and decreased bone mass. Rate of hip fractures among Hong Kong women between 1966 and 1995. Q: Why might medications that increase inorganic composition of bone not always be clinically beneficial? Q: What unusual traits were observed in the clinical case reported by Smith? Q: Why was estrogen administered? Why was it ineffective? Smith et al. 1994. New England Journal of Medicine 331:1056 FROM NERVE TO MUSCLE . . . Muscle tissue represents about 40% of body weight Q. How do motor neuron action potentials make muscles contract? Need to understand the structure of muscle 6 MUSCLE STRUCTURE AND CONTRACTION muscles Striated skeletal cardiac fibers = cells fibrils Smooth (unstriated) filaments thin filament thick filament 7 Muscle contraction is initiated at the neuromuscular junction A single motor unit consists of a motor neuron and all of the muscle fibers it innervates. 8 Striated muscle fibrils fiber sarcoplasmic reticulum in x-section fibril 9 Myofilament organization dictates the macroscopic appearance of muscle. dark = A ht g i l I= sc i d Z Q: through which parts of the fiber were these sections made? 10 The Sliding Filament Theory of muscle contraction 11 The neuromuscular junction is the point of synaptic contact between the axon terminal of a motor neuron and the muscle fiber it controls. Action potentials in the motor neuron cause acetylcholine release into the neuromuscular junction. 12 13 Q: Where in the muscle contraction cycle do ligand-gated channels occur? Voltage-gated? 1 2 3 DHP “receptor” senses t-tubule voltage->ryanodine receptor 4 ryanodine receptor releases Ca2+ into cytosol. Ryanodine 14 Relaxed: tropomyosin blocks the cross-bridge binding site on actin. 5 Ready: Ca2+ binds to troponin: -tropomyosin “moves” -myosin binding sites exposed. 15 6 another 6 substeps involving ATP hydrolyzation A-M binding, ready 6.1 ADP released, binding site clear “power stroke” powered by P release 6.5 6.2 6.5 6.3 ATP binds to actin, release A-M bond ATP partially hydrolysis 6.4 Actin head “cocked” 16 THREE TESTS OF THE SLIDING FILAMENT MODEL Q: Do sarcomeres change in length and structure when they contract? If so, which regions contract? at rest 17 THREE TESTS OF THE SLIDING FILAMENT MODEL Q: Do sarcomeres change in length and structure when they contract? If so, which regions contract? at rest contracted 18 Q: Does concentration of myoplasmic free calcium change during contraction? Furaptra = a fluorescent calcium indicator 19 Furaptra = a fluorescent calcium indicator Q: What is happening between the time of the action potential and the peak of myoplasmic calcium? Q: Why is the contractile force generated AFTER the spike in myoplasmic free calcium? 20 Q: Does the force generated by muscles differ in muscles of different resting length? HINT: ARE FILAMENTS INFINITELY LONG? 21 22 23