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Cecie Starr Christine Evers Lisa Starr www.cengage.com/biology/starr Chapter 32 Structural Support and Movement (Sections 32.5 - 32.7) Albia Dugger • Miami Dade College 32.5 How Skeletal Muscle Contracts • A skeletal muscle consists of bundles of muscle fibers covered by an outer sheath • Bones of a human in motion move when skeletal muscles attached to them shorten • The internal organization of a skeletal muscle promotes a strong, directional contraction • A muscle shortens when muscle fibers, and the contractile units inside the fibers, shorten Motion and Skeletal Muscles Motion and Skeletal Muscles outer sheath of one skeletal muscle one bundle of many muscle fibers in parallel inside the sheath Fig. 32.11a, p. 528 Structure of Skeletal Muscle • Many myofibrils run the length of a muscle fiber • skeletal muscle fiber • Multinucleated skeletal muscle cell • myofibrils • Threadlike, cross-banded skeletal muscle components that consist of sarcomeres arranged end to end Structure of Skeletal Muscle (cont.) • Each myofibril has light-to-dark cross-bands which are units of muscle contraction (sarcomeres) • The sarcomere has parallel arrays of thin and thick filaments • sarcomere • Contractile unit of skeletal and cardiac muscle Structure of Skeletal Muscle (cont.) • Each thin filament consists of two chains of a globular protein (actin) • Thicker filaments consist of myosin • actin • Protein that is the main component of thin filaments of muscle fibers • myosin • Protein in thick filaments of muscle fibers Sarcomere Structure Sarcomere Structure B one myofibril, made up of sarcomeres arranged end to end sarcomere Z line sarcomere Z line Z line Fig. 32.11b, p. 528 Sarcomere Structure Z line Z line C one sarcomere, with parallel actin and myosin filaments actin Z line myosin actin Z line Fig. 32.11c, p. 528 Animation 6.7: Structure of skeletal muscle To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE Sliding-Filament Model • The sliding-filament model describes how ATP-driven sliding of actin filaments past myosin filaments shortens the sarcomere • Shortening of all sarcomeres in all myofibrils of all muscle fibers brings about muscle contraction • sliding-filament model • How interactions among actin and myosin filaments shorten a sarcomere and bring about muscle contraction Steps in the Sliding-Filament Model 1. In a muscle at rest, actin and myosin filaments lie next to one another, but do not interact 2. Myosin heads in the thick filaments are activated by a phosphate-group transfer from ATP 3. Release of calcium from intracellular storage allows myosin heads to bind to sites on adjacent actin filaments, forming cross-bridges Steps in the Sliding-Filament Model 4. A myosin head releases bound ADP and phosphate as it tilts toward the sarcomere center with actin filaments attached 5. New ATP binds to myosin heads, causing them to release actin and return to their original orientation 6. Myosin heads repeatedly binding to and pulling on adjacent actin filaments cause the sarcomere to contract The Sliding-Filament Model The Sliding-Filament Model Fig. 32.12.1, p. 529 The Sliding-Filament Model 1 actin myosin actin Sarcomere between contractions Fig. 32.12.1, p. 529 The Sliding-Filament Model Fig. 32.12.2,3, p. 529 The Sliding-Filament Model 2 myosin head with bound ADP and P one of many myosin-binding sites on actin 3 cross-bridge cross-bridge Fig. 32.12.2,3, p. 529 The Sliding-Filament Model Fig. 32.12.4, p. 529 The Sliding-Filament Model ADP and P released 4 Fig. 32.12.4, p. 529 The Sliding-Filament Model Fig. 32.12.5,6, p. 529 The Sliding-Filament Model 5 cross-bridge broken 6 cross-bridge broken Same sarcomere, contracted Fig. 32.12.5,6, p. 529 ANIMATION: Sliding filament model To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE Animation: Structure of a Sarcomere Animation: Muscle Contraction Overview 32.6 From Signal to Response • Release of ACh at a neuromuscular junction causes an action potential which is propagated along the plasma membrane of the muscle cell, and along T tubules to the sarcoplasmic reticulum • Calcium ions released by this organelle allow actin and myosin heads to interact so muscle contraction occurs • sarcoplasmic reticulum • Specialized endoplasmic reticulum in muscle cells • Stores and releases calcium ions Nervous Control of Contraction (1) • A signal travels along the axon of a motor neuron from the spinal cord to a skeletal muscle Nervous Control of Contraction (1) motor neuron section from spinal cord Fig. 32.13a, p. 530 Animation 6.9: Nervous system and muscle contraction To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE Nervous Control of Contraction (2) • Signal transfers from motor neuron to muscle at neuromuscular junctions • ACh from axon terminals diffuses into muscle fiber and causes action potentials Nervous Control of Contraction (2) neuromuscular junction section from skeletal muscle Fig. 32.13b, p. 530 Nervous Control of Contraction (3) • Action potentials propagate along the plasma membrane to T tubules, to sarcoplasmic reticulum, which releases calcium ions • Ions promote interactions of myosin and actin Nervous Control of Contraction (3) sarcoplasmic T reticulum tubule one myofibril in muscle fiber muscle fiber’s plasma membrane Fig. 32.13c, p. 530 1 A signal travels motor neuron along the axon of a motor neuron, from the spinal cord to a skeletal muscle. section from spinal cord 2 The signal is transferred from the motor neuron to the muscle at neuromuscular junctions. Here, ACh released by the neuron’s axon terminals diffuses into the muscle fiber and causes action potentials. Nervous Control of Contraction neuromuscular junction section from skeletal muscle T sarcoplasmic tubule reticulum 3 Action potentials propagate along a muscle fiber’s plasma membrane down toT tubules, then to the sarcoplasmic reticulum, which releases calciumions. The ions promote interactions of myosin and actin that result in contraction. one myofibril in muscle fiber muscle fiber’s plasma membrane Stepped Art Fig. 32.13, p. 530 Motor Units and Muscle Tension • A motor neuron and all of the muscle fibers it synapses with constitute one motor unit • Brief stimulation of a motor unit causes a muscle twitch • Repeated stimulation causes a sustained contraction that generates more force (muscle tension), depending on the number of muscle fibers that contract Key Terms • motor unit • One motor neuron and the muscle fibers it controls • muscle twitch • Brief muscle contraction • muscle tension • Force exerted by a contracting muscle Muscle Tension Muscle Tension Force relaxation starts stimulus contraction A Brief stimulation causes a twitch. Fig. 32.14b, p. 530 Force Muscle Tension twitch sustained contraction repeated stimulation Time B Repeated stimulation within a short interval causes a sustained contraction with greater force. Fig. 32.14b, p. 530 Animation: Types of contractions Energy for Contraction • Muscle fibers produce ATP needed for contraction by three pathways: dephosphorylation of creatine phosphate, aerobic respiration, and lactate fermentation • ATP • The first energy source a muscle uses, but muscle has a limited amount of ATP Three Pathways of ATP Production • Muscle has a large store of creatine phosphate, which can transfer a phosphate to ADP and form ATP – fuels muscle contraction until other pathways increase ATP output • Aerobic respiration (oxygen-requiring) yields most ATP used by a muscle during prolonged, moderate activity • Lactate fermentation produces less ATP than aerobic respiration, but operates even when oxygen level is low Three Pathways of ATP Production Three Pathways of ATP Production 1 dephosphorylation of creatine phosphate ADP + Pi creatine 2 aerobic respiration oxygen 3 lactate fermentation glucose from bloodstream and from glycogen breakdown in cells Fig. 32.15, p. 531 Animation: Energy sources for contraction To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE Types of Muscle Fibers • Muscles have a mix of red and white fibers, which differ in the way they produce ATP • Muscle fibers can also be subdivided into fast fibers or slow fibers based on the ATPase activity of their myosin • Fast fibers split ATP more efficiently and contract more quickly than slow fibers when stimulated Red Fibers and White Fibers • Red fibers make ATP mainly by aerobic respiration • Have many mitochondria and oxygen-storing myoglobin • Can be either fast or slow • White fibers make ATP mainly by lactate fermentation • Have no myoglobin and few mitochondria • All white fibers are fast fibers Key Concepts • How Skeletal Muscle Contracts • A muscle fiber contains many myofibrils, each divided crosswise into sarcomeres • Sarcomeres contain parallel filaments of the proteins actin and myosin • Muscle contracts when ATP-driven interactions between these proteins shortens sarcomeres BBC Video: How Muscles Hold Tension 32.7 Muscles and Health • In humans, all muscle fibers form before birth • Exercise can’t add muscle fibers, but it can increase muscle strength and endurance • Muscle function can be impaired by genetic disorders, infectious disease, and some toxins Effects of Exercise • Aerobic exercise, which is low in intensity and long in duration, makes muscles more resistant to fatigue • Strength training (intense, short-duration exercise such as weight lifting) stimulates formation of more actin and myosin, as well more enzymes of glycolysis Aerobic Exercise • Aerobic exercise increases the number of mitochondria in muscles, which increases endurance Strength Training • Strength training involves two types of muscle contractions: • Isotonically contracting muscles shorten and move some load, as when you lift an object • Isometrically contracting muscles tense but do not shorten, as when you try to lift an object but fail because its weight exceeds the muscle’s capacity Isotonic and Isometric Contraction Isotonic and Isometric Contraction A Isotonic contraction. Muscle tension is greater than the opposing force and the muscle shortens, as when you lift a light weight. B Isometric contraction. Muscle tension is less than the opposing force and the muscle remains at the same length, rather than shortening. Fig. 32.17, p. 532 Isotonic and Isometric Contraction A Isotonic contraction. Muscle tension is greater than the opposing force and the muscle shortens, as when you lift a light weight. Fig. 32.17a, p. 532 Isotonic and Isometric Contraction B Isometric contraction. Muscle tension is less than the opposing force and the muscle remains at the same length, rather than shortening. Fig. 32.17b, p. 532 Muscles and Aging • As people age, muscles shrink: • Number of muscle fibers declines • Fibers grow more slowly in response to exercise • Muscle injuries take longer to heal • Exercise can be helpful at any age: • Strength training slows loss of muscle tissue • Aerobic exercise improves circulation, helps lift depression, and improves brain functions Muscular Dystrophy • Muscular dystrophies are a class of genetic disorders that cause muscles to break down • In Duchenne muscular dystrophy, the affected gene encodes, a protein (dystrophin) in muscle fibers’ plasma membranes • Mutated dystrophin allows foreign material to enter a muscle fiber, which causes the fiber to break down, resulting in death by respiratory failure Effects of Muscular Dystrophy Motor Neuron Disorders • Muscular weakness or paralysis occurs when motor neurons cannot signal muscles to contract • Poliovirus infects and kills motor neurons, causing death or paralysis • Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS or Lou Gehrig’s disease) also kills motor neurons, causing death by respiratory failure Botulism and Tetanus • Some bacteria make deadly toxins that disrupt the flow of signals from nerves to muscles • Botulinum toxin prevents motor neurons from releasing acetylcholine (ACh) – muscles can’t contract without this neurotransmitter • Tetanus toxin in the spinal cord blocks release of neurotransmitters that inhibit motor neurons – muscles stiffen and cannot be released from contraction Tetanus Key Concepts • Factors Affecting Contraction • Muscle fibers in a muscle are organized into motor units that contract in response to signals from a motor neuron • Diseases or disorders can interfere with muscle function • Exercise improves muscle strength and endurance Muscles and Myostatin (revisited) • Drugs that inhibit myostatin production or prevent myostatin activity may help to slow the muscle loss that results from muscular dystrophy, ALS, and even normal aging