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Muscle Physiology Dr. Mohammad Alqudah, Ph.D. Department of Physiology and Biochemistry School of Medicine , M2 5th floor [email protected] Outline I. II. III. IV. V. VI. III. IV. Introduction and muscle functions Skeletal Muscle Structure Muscle Contraction: Cell Events Muscle Contraction: Mechanical Events Neuromuscular junction Characteristics of muscle contraction Muscle Metabolism Types of Skeletal Muscle Fibers Muscle Function • Movement – Depends on type of muscle tissue – Depends on location of muscle tissue • • • • Thermogenesis Protection Posture Maintenance Joint Stabilization Muscle Tissue Characteristics All muscle tissues share basic characteristics 1.Excitability 2.Contractility 3.Elasticity 4.Extensibility Classification of Muscle - According to fine structure, neuronal control and anatomy • Structurally, there are striated or smooth muscles • Anatomically, Skeletal, cardiac and visceral muscles • Neuronal control, voluntary and involuntary Muscle Tissue Types Skeletal Cardiac Smooth Muscle Comparison Chart Muscle Tissue Cell Shape Striae Nucleus Control Special structures Voluntary none Involuntary Intercalated discs Involuntary May be single-unit or multi-unit Skeletal Cylindrical Yes Multinucleate & peripheral Cardiac Cylindrical & branched Yes Uninucleate & central No Uninucleate & central Smooth Fusiform Skeletal Muscle Functional Anatomy Skeletal muscle Physiologic anatomy of skeletal muscle Skeletal Muscle Fiber Banded appearance The striations are arranged longitudinally into myofibrils Z line Z line General mechanism of muscle contraction Excitation –Contraction Coupling - Links action potential to contraction 1. Motor neuron excitation - action potential in the nerve cell - action potential in muscle cell - the T tubule conducts the action potential deep into the muscle 2. Ca+2 release from the SR into the myoplasm… The process by which depolarization of the T-tubule Is converted to an intracellular calcium signal and the Subsequent activation of contraction is called Excitation-Contraction Coupling Molecular mechanism of Muscle contraction Sliding mechanism or walk along theory http://highered.mcgrawhill.com/sites/0072495855/student_view0/cha pter10/animation__sarcomere_contraction.ht ml Characteristics of Contractile proteins Sarcomere (the functional unit of skeletal muscle) The sarcomere • The myofibrils are organized into a repetitive pattern, the sarcomere • Myosin: thick filament • Actin: thin filament • Bands formed by pattern: A and I and H bands • Z line: area of attachment of the actin fibers • M line: Myosin fiber centers Myosin Structure • Myosin molecule consists of 6 proteins that make : tail, hinge and heads (Two heavy Chains and four light chains) – Heads contain active sites for • Actin • ATP • Titin a giant protein that serves as a template for myosin assembly • M Line – stabilize the myosin filaments – theorized to aid in transmission of force from sarcomere to cytoskeletal intermediate filaments M Line Actin structure • Thin filaments are composed of – g-actin molecules in a helical arrangement • Contain myosin binding sites – nebulin • Filament that forms internal support and attachment for actin – tropomyosin filaments – troponin (complex of three molecules) attached to tropomyosin • Has binding sites for Ca2+ Figure 12.4 Sarcomere Contraction Muscle Contraction: Mechanical Events Acto-myosin cross bridge cycle • Myosin heads bind to actin filaments • ATP hydrolysis allows the myosin head to walk along the actin filament • Myosin is an actin-activated AtPase Rigor Mortis : In the absence of ATP, the muscles remain in a contraction state as the myosin head stayed attached to actin ( ATP is the cause of separation) and this what Happens the muscles of the body after death Watch the Cross Bridge Cycle animation. http://media.pearsoncmg.com/bc/bc_0media _ap/apflix/ap/ap_video_player.html?cbc Neuromuscular Junction Components of neuromuscular junction • Motor neuron • End plate region • Presynaptic terminal ( mitochondria and synaptic vesicles 10,000 Ach per vesicle) • Synaptic cleft (or gap) (Cholinesterase) • Postsynaptic membrane ( neurotransmitter’s receptors) Mechanism of neuromuscular transmission • Action potential is conducted from the motor neuron to the muscle chemically through the neuromuscular junction via a substance called neurotransmitter like acetylcholine • Events during transmission: 1. Synthesis - in presynaptic terminals by the enzyme choline acetyltransferese 2. Storage – 10,000 to 20,000 Ach molecules per vesicle 3. Release : - Action potential arrives at terminal and causes depolarization and increases in calcium influx to the terminal. - Ca+2 in turn causes the vesicles to fuse with presynaptic membrane to empty its content in the cleft. - Ach diffuses across to the postsynaptic membrane where it activates its receptor . - membrane conductance increases to Na + , results in depolarization called the end plate potential( EPP), if the EPP exceeds threshold, action potential is produced and muscle contracts. Mechanism of neuromuscular transmission 4. Reuptake – Ach action in the cleft lasts only a short time because Ach is cleaved by the action of cholinesterase , by products are reabsorbed and taken up by the presynaptic terminal End plate Potentials EPPs • They are graded potentials with the amplitude depends upon amount of Ach Drugs that affect the transmission at the neuromuscular junction Ach release : 1. Ca+2 2. Mg+ and Mn+ 3. Botulin toxin Bind to the receptors 1. D – tubocurare ( curare) inhibits transmission 2. Carbachole 3. Methacholine Ach like effect Cholinesterase inhibitors: 1. Irreversible – nerve gas and insecticides 2. Reversible - neostigmine and physiostigmine Myasthenia gravis: autoimmune disease where antibodies against the Ach receptors are produced. Which consequences do you expect? Characteristics of muscle contraction • Single action potential (stimulation) causes single muscle contraction (Twitch) • Twitch three phases : Latent, contraction and relaxation Figure 12.16 Muscle force depends on the number of motor units that are activated • Stronger stimulus produces stronger twitch , as progressively increasing stimulus activates More motor neurons , which activates more motor neurons which leads to more force. (recruitment) • Motor unit is the motor neuron and all of its innervated muscle fibers • The size principle : Motor units are recruited in order of their size http://people.fmarion.edu/tbarbeau/physio_muscle_supplements.htm Muscle force can be increased by increasing the frequency of motor neuron firing • The action potential is much shorter that the muscle twitch • Thus, the nerve can stimulate the muscle before the muscle has relaxed or even before it reaches its peak tension • The frequency must exceed 1/twitch time (period) in order for summation to take place • At high frequency the force shows no waviness, this is called Tetanus Effect of consecutive stimuli: Treppe • Treppe: gradual increase in contraction intensity during sequential stimulation • Might be due to calcium ions accumulating in the cytoplasm with each stimulation Figure 12.15 Molecular rational behind frequency summation and tantalization • Single action potential causes single Ca+2 transient. • Force development depends on intracellular Ca+2 concentration , so repetitive stimulation causes repetitive Ca+2 and hence more force. Isometric/isotonic contractions • Isometric: muscle contraction without movement no muscle shortening • Isotonic: muscle contraction with movement muscle shortens Muscle force depends on the length of the muscle • • • • Stretching a muscle produces a passive force The active tension rises and then falls with the stretch of the muscle Active tension = Total tension - passive tension The relationship between active force and muscle length is the Length-tension curve The sliding filament hypothesis predicts that force depends on the overlap of thick and thin filaments • At a sarcomere length of 3.65u there is no force because there is no overlap. • At progressively shorter length the overlap increases and the force increases as well Until at 2.2 sarcomere length, there is maximal overlap and maximal force. This force does not decrease until the sarcomere shortens to less that 1.95. • At shorter length the thin filaments begin to run into each other and the number of cross bridges decrease . • When the thick filaments butt up against the Z-disk the force falls precipitously. Figure 12.18 The velocity of muscle contraction varies inversely with the afterload • Concentric contraction – shortening of the muscle • Eccentric contraction lengthening