Understanding Muscle Function and Contraction

Sep 30, 2024

Muscle Function and Contraction

Types of Muscle Tissues

  • Cardiac and Smooth Muscle
    • Involuntary control
    • Not consciously controlled
  • Skeletal Muscle
    • Voluntary control
    • Composed of bundles of muscle fibers

Muscle Fibers

  • Made of long cylindrical cells with multiple nuclei
  • Contract or relax upon receiving signals from the nervous system

Neuromuscular Junction

  • Site of signal exchange
  • Connection between the synaptic bulb of an axon terminal and a muscle fiber

Myofibrils and Sarcomeres

  • Muscle fibers contain myofibrils
  • Myofibrils consist of sarcomeres (contractile units)
    • Alternating thick and thin protein filaments
    • Give skeletal muscle a striated appearance

Sliding Filament Mechanism

  • Thick Filaments
    • Composed of myosin
    • Anchored at the M-line (center of sarcomere)
  • Thin Filaments
    • Composed of actin
    • Anchored to Z lines (outer edges of sarcomere)
  • Contraction Process
    • Myosin pulls actin filaments
    • Myosin's cross bridges attach to actin, exerting force
    • Sarcomeres shorten as filaments slide past each other

Power Stroke

  • ATP hydrolyzed to ADP and inorganic phosphate
  • Myosin head extends, attaches to actin
  • Myosin pulls actin toward M-line, shortening the sarcomere
  • ADP and phosphate released
  • Myosin detaches when a new ATP binds

Role of Calcium

  • Regulatory Proteins
    • Tropomyosin blocks binding sites on actin when muscle is relaxed
    • Troponin binds to calcium, displaces tropomyosin, exposing binding sites
  • Calcium Storage and Release
    • Stored in the sarcoplasmic reticulum
    • Released upon nerve signals
    • Triggers muscle contraction

Muscle Contraction

  • Neurotransmitters depolarize muscle fiber membrane
  • Electrical impulse travels down T-tubules
  • Opens calcium stores, calcium ions flow to myofibrils
  • Actin and myosin slide, shortening sarcomeres
  • Muscle fibers shorten, generating force for movement (e.g., taking notes)