Section 1, Chapter 9 Muscular System

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Chapter 9, Section 1 Muscular System

description

Muscular system chapter for anatomy & physiology

Transcript of Section 1, Chapter 9 Muscular System

Page 1: Section 1, Chapter 9 Muscular System

Chapter 9, Section 1

Muscular System

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Muscle is derived from Musculus, for “Mouse”

Imagine a mouse running beneath the skin.

Functions of Muscles:

1. Body movement

2. Maintain posture

3. Produces heat

4. Propel substances

through body

5. Heartbeat

Types of muscles:

1. Smooth muscle

2. Cardiac muscle

3. Skeletal muscle

Imagine a mouse running beneath the skin.

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Smooth Muscle Fibers

Characteristics of smooth muscles

• Involuntary control

• Tapered cells with a single, central nucleus

• Lack striations

• Visceral Smooth Muscle

• Form sheets of muscle

• Cells are connected by gap junctions

• Multi-unit Smooth Muscle

• unorganized cells that

contract as individual cells • Cells are connected by gap junctions

• Muscle fibers contract as a group

• Rhythmic contractions

• Within walls of most hollow organs

(viscera)

contract as individual cells

•Located within the iris of eye

and the walls of blood vessels

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Cardiac Muscle

•Located only in the heart•Located only in the heart

•Striated cells

•Intercalated discs

• Muscle fibers branch

•Muscle fibers contract

as a unit

• Self-exciting and rhythmic

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Skeletal Muscle

• Usually attached to bone

• Voluntary control

• Striated (light & dark bands)

• Muscle fibers form bundles

• Several peripheral nuclei

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Coverings of Skeletal Muscle

Fascia

• Dense connective tissue surrounding

skeletal muscles

Tendons

• Dense connective tissue that

attaches muscle to bones

• Continuation of muscle facia and • Continuation of muscle facia and

bone periosteum

Aponeurosis

• Broad sheet of connective tissue

attaching muscles to bone, or to

other muscles.

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Coverings of Skeletal Muscle

Epimysium

• Connective tissue closely

surrounding a muscle

• Lies deep to fascia

PerimysiumPerimysium

• Surrounds organized bundles of

muscle fibers, called fascicles

Endomysium

• Connective tissue that surrounds

individual muscle fibers (cells)

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Figure 9.3 Scanning electron micrograph of a

fascicle surrounded by its perimysium. Muscle

fibers within the fascicle are surrounded by

endomysium.

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Organization of Skeletal Muscle

Fascicle

• Organized bundle of muscle fibers

Muscle Fiber

• Single muscle cell

• Collection of myofibrils

MyofibrilsMyofibrils

• Collection of myofilaments

Myofilaments

• Actin filament

• Myosin filament

Figure 9.2

Skeletal muscle

organization

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Sarcolemma

• Cell membrane of muscle fibers

Sarcoplasm

• Cytoplasm of muscle fibers

Sarcoplasmic Reticulum

• Modified Endoplasmic Reticulum

Skeletal Muscle Fibers

• Modified Endoplasmic Reticulum

• Store large deposits of Calicium

sarcolemma

Figure 9.2 c. A single muscle fiber

composed of several myofibrils. A

sarcolemma (membrane) surrounds the

cell, and an extensive sarcoplasmic

reticulum runs along the cell.

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Skeletal Muscle Fibers

(Transverse)T-tubules:

• invaginations of sarcolemma,

extending into the sarcoplasm.

Cisternae:

• Enlarged region of sarcoplasmic

reticulum, adjacent to t-tubules

Openings into t-tubules

reticulum, adjacent to t-tubules

Triad

• T-tubule + adjacent cisternae

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Myofibrils

Myofibrils

• Actin – thin filaments

• Myosin – thick filaments

Striations

Figure 9.4 Organization of actin and myosin filaments

Striations

• appear from the

organization of actin and

myosin

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Sarcomere

Sarcomere

• Functional unit of

skeletal muscle

•Area between

adjacent Z-lines

•During contraction

Z-lines approach together

and sarcomeres shorten

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• I Bands (light): actin filaments

• Z Line = attaches to actin

filaments (center of I bands)

• A Band (dark) : Myosin

filaments and overlapping actin

filaments

Striation Pattern of Skeletal Muscle

Figure 9.5 thin and thick filaments in a

sarcomere.

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• Thick myofilaments

• Myosin proteins

• Cross-bridges (heads) on myosin

• Cross-bridge attaches to actin

during contraction

• Thin myofilaments

• Actin proteins

• Associated with troponin

and tropomyosin proteins

MyofilamentsMyofilaments

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Cross-BridgesCross-Bridges• Myosin cross-bridges are extended when muscles are at rest “cocked”

position.

•During a contraction, cross-bridges bind to actin and “spring” forward. (Power Stroke)

• Cross-bridges pull on actin as they spring forward.

• ATP is required to “recock” the cross-bridges. (Recovery stroke)

Myosin cross-bridge

In the “cocked” position

Myosin cross-bridge

In the “sprung” position

Actin binding site

Power stroke