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The Sliding Filament Theory The Sliding Filament Theory Troponin complex The Sliding Filament Theory REVIEW: Cycle The Contraction Sliding Filament Theory article & Concept Map - As you read the article that tells you experiments that led closer to day skeletal muscle, be about the first scientists the presentunderstanding of looking for… 5 Golden Rules of Skeletal Muscle Activity Muscles & Body Movements • Movement is attained due to a muscle moving an attached bone • Muscles are attached to points • Origin • Attachment to • Insertion • Attachment to at least 2 moveable bone immovable bone Isotonic Contractions • Isotonic Contraction: • Example: lifting dumbbells with arm • Tension (effort) increases & muscle fibers shorten & lengthen • Concentric contraction: • Tension (effort) exceeds resistance (weight) & muscle shortens • Eccentric contraction: • Resistance exceeds tension (effort) & muscle lengthens (due to gravity) Isometric Contractions • Isometric Contraction: • Example: pushing against a wall • Tension (effort) never exceeds resistance (weight) • Muscle does NOT change length Muscle Relaxation • Relaxation of muscle fibers • Passive process • Combo of elastic forces, opposing muscle contractions & gravity to elongate a contracted muscle • Elastic force: some energy used to stretch tendons in contraction phase forces a recoil • Opposing muscle contractions: muscles move in antagonistic pairs • Gravity: pulls down muscle to extended position Rigor mortis Within 3-4 hours after death • Dying muscle cell membranes become more permeable to Ca+ ions • Promotes myosin cross-bridge binding • After death, circulation of nutrients ends • Without ATP, Ca+ ions are not removed & crossbridges cannot detach from actin sites so muscles become locked in place – “stiff” • Rigor mortis disappears as muscle proteins break down several hours after death (48-60 hours) Effect of Exercise on Muscles • Exercise increases muscle size, strength & endurance • Aerobic (endurance/ cardiovascular) exercise (biking, jogging) results in stronger, more flexible muscles with greater resistance to fatigue • Makes body metabolism more efficient • Improves digestion & coordination • Resistance (isotonic & isometric) exercise (weight-lifting) increases muscle size & strength Fast vs. Slow-Twitch Muscles • Fast Twitch Fibers • Most skeletal muscle fibers • Contract in 0.01 sec or less after stimulation • Large in diameter • Contain densely-packed myofibrils • Have large glycogen reserves & few mitochondria • Produce powerful contractions • Fatigue rapidly • “white muscle fibers” Fast vs. Slow-Twitch Muscles • Slow Twitch Fibers • ~Half the diameter of fast fibers • Take 3x as long to contract after stimulation • Specialized to continue contracting for extended periods • Contain extensive network of capillaries & has higher oxygen supply • Contain red pigment myoglobin • Contain more mitochondria than fast fibers • “red muscle fibers” • Intermediate Fibers • Contain properties of fast fibers & slow fibers Tetanus • Many toxins, drugs & diseases may interfere with occurring at the neuromuscular junction events • Tetanus: infection of Nervous System from potentially deadly bacteria Clostridium tetani – Bacteria spreads & makes poison called tetanospasmin – Poison blocks nerve signals from spinal cord to skeletal muscles, causing severe muscle spasms – Prolonged muscle contractions, spasms & stiffness – Spasms can be so powerful that they tear the muscles or cause fractures of the spine