By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing...

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By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender

Transcript of By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing...

Page 1: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender

Page 2: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal body

• System- organized arrangement; network….

• Set of connected fibrous tissue that work together to produce movement

Page 3: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Provide muscle tone• Propel body fluids and food• Generate the heartbeat• Distribute heat throughout the body

Page 4: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Skeletal muscle•Moves majority of the body

• Smooth muscle•Helps most with digestive system

• Cardiac muscle•Controls the heartbeat

Page 5: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Location: all skeletal muscles- attach to bones

• Function: movement of bones at joints and maintaining posture

• Voluntary• Contracts and relaxes quickly• Transverse tubule system is well-

developed

Page 6: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Composed of:•skeletal muscle tissue •nervous tissue•blood•connective tissue

Page 7: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Fascia- layers of fibrous connective tissue•covers and separates each muscle surface

• Epimysium- lies beneath the fascia• Perimysium- surrounds individual bundles of fibers (fascicles)

• Endomysium- connective tissue layer that separates individual muscle fibers

Page 8: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.
Page 9: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Cells that contract in response to stimulation and then relax after the stimulation ends

• Thin and elongated cylinders with rounded ends

• Can extend full length of a muscle

Page 10: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Sarcolemma- muscle fiber membrane↓

• Sarcoplasm- cytoplasm↓

• Myofibrils- protein filaments which lie parallel and play great role in contraction• Types: Myosin- thicker, called A bands (dark)Actin- thinner, called I bands (light)

• Sarcomere- space from center of one I band to the next I band

Page 11: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Sarcoplasmic Reticulum- network of membranous channels that surround each myofibril and run parellel

• Transverse Tubules (T tubules)- network of membranous channels between sarcoplasm that open outside

• Both- activate muscle contraction mechanism when the fiber is stimulated

Page 12: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.
Page 13: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Site where the motor neuron and muscle fiber meet

• Muscle fiber is specialized to form a motor end plate

• End branches, has many mitochondria and contains synaptic vesicles that store chemicals

• Neurotransmitter stimulates muscle fibers to release acetylcholine

• Travels down a motor neuron axon and stimulates muscle fiber contraction

Page 14: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.
Page 15: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Includes one motor neuron and several muscle fibers•The motor neuron transmits an impulse, which allows all the linked muscle fibers to contract at the same time

Page 16: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Sarcomeres shorten and the muscle is pulled against its attachments

• Sliding Filament Model• Myosin cross-bridge attaches to the binding site on the actin filament and bends, causing a pull on the actin filament

• Myosin releases and attaches to the next binding site on the actin, causing a pull• ATP converts to ADP

• Repeats this cycle as long as the energy source ATP is available and the muscle fiber is stimulated to contract

Page 17: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Stimulated by acetylcholine (neurotransmitter)

• Motor neuron releases acetylcholine into the synaptic cleft to initiate contraction

• Motor end plate has protein receptors which detect acetylcholine

• Muscle impulse travels over sarcolemma surface and into T tubules, reaching the sarcoplasmic reticulum

Page 18: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Stored calcium ions in the sarcoplasmic reticulum get released into the sarcoplasm

• Troponin and tropomyosin (proteins associated with actin) move to expose the myosin binding sites on the actin filaments due to the concentration of calcium

• Muscle shortens because myosin binds and pulls on actin

• After received- acetylcholinesterase breaks down acetylcholine, calcium returns to sarcoplasmic reticulum, and myosin and actin links break

Page 19: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• ATP molecules provides the energy•Must be regenerated because it has a limited supply

• Creatine phosphate•Energy can be transferred to ADP molecules, converting them back ATP molecules as ATP is decomposing

Page 20: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Cellular respiration makes a few ATP molecules in early phases

• Muscles require oxygen • Glucose in broken down completely in

mitochondria • Blood carries oxygen, bound to the

pigment hemoglobin• The pigment myoglobin stores the

oxygen in muscle tissue

Page 21: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• The amount of oxygen that liver cells need to convert lactic acid into glucose, and the amount muscle cells must have to recreate the original concentration of ATP and creatine phosphate

• Develops during strenuous activity•Pyruvic acid builds up during anaerobic respiration and diffuses out of muscle cells into the liver

• May take hours to repay

Page 22: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• When a muscle can no longer contract

• Usually from a build up of lactic acid in the muscle, which lowers pH and results in muscle fibers to not respond to stimulation

• Cramps- a muscle has a sustained involuntary contraction

Page 23: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• More than half of energy released in cellular respiration becomes heat

• All active cells generate heat, but muscle cells make up a large majority of a bodies total mass

• Blood moves heat from muscle to other tissues, maintaining body temperature

Page 24: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Location: walls of hollow internal organs, blood vessels

• Function: to move food through the digestive system and constrict blood vessels

• Involuntary• Contracts and relaxes slowly• Rhythmic• No transverse tubules

Page 25: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Major types:• Multiunit: muscle fibers are separate

• Usually contract in response to stimulation by certain hormones or motor nerve impulses

• Visceral: organized in sheets • Are found in walls of hollow organs• Can stimulate others, displaying rhythmically• Responsible for involuntary wavelike motion

called peristalsis

Page 26: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Reactions of actin and myosin• Triggered by membrane impulses and

increased intracellular calcium ions• Uses energy from ATP • Neurotransmitters are acetylcholine

and norepinephrine• Affected by hormones• Fibers can change length without

changing tension

Page 27: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Location: wall of the heart ONLY• Function: pumping action of the heart• Involuntary• Network of cells contract as a unit• Rhythmic• Transverse tubule system is well-

developed• Intercalated discs separating

adjacent cells

Page 28: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Intercalated discs communicate a muscle impulse throughout entire heart•Allows the hearts muscle fibers to beat as a single unit

• Network responds in an all-or-none manner

Page 29: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Threshold Stimulus- the minimal strength required to cause a contraction•Muscle fibers remain unresponsive until reached

Page 30: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• All-or-None Response- if a muscle fiber contracts at all, it contracts fully

• There is no partial contraction• Once threshold stimulus is reached,

fiber responds to fullest contraction

Page 31: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Recording a Muscle Contraction:•Myogram- the pattern resulting from a movement when connected to a device

•Twitch- a single contraction that lasts only a fraction of a second

•Latent period- the delay between the time of stimulation and the time the fiber responds

Page 32: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

(a) Series of twitches

(b) Summation

(c) Tetanic Contraction

Page 33: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Summation- when the stimulus of the next series arrives before the muscle fiber can completely relax

• Tetanic Contraction- when a forceful, sustained contraction lacks any relaxation

Page 34: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Recruitment of Motor Units:•Recruitment- the number of motor units activated as a result of a higher intensity of stimulation• The addiction of muscle fibers to take part in a contraction

Page 35: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Sustained Contractions:•Produced by summation and recruitment together

• Increasing strength•Muscle tone- fibers undergo some sustained contraction even when muscles appear to be relaxed• Keeps posture maintained

Page 36: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Muscular hypertrophy: muscles enlarging in size and strength due to forceful exercise

• Muscular atrophy: muscles decreasing in size and strength due to lack of exercise

• Size is relative to strength•Capillary networks, actin and myosin filaments, and number of mitochondria

Page 37: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Slow twitch fibers: lower intensity and able to resist fatigue, but may not increase muscle size•Running or swimming

• Fast twitch fibers: higher intensity and increase muscle size, but are fatigable•Lifting weights

Page 38: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Variety of movements• Movement depends on:

•The kind of joint•How the muscle attaches

Page 39: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Origin: the immovable end of a muscle• Insertion: the movable end of a muscle• The insertion is pulled towards the

origin when contraction occurs• Flexion and extension tell about the

angle between bones that meet at a joint

Page 40: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Almost always function in groups• Must will movement to occur and

nervous system allows correct muscles to stimulate

• Prime Mover/Agonist: muscle responsible for a particular movement

• Synergist: muscles that contract and assist the prime mover

• Antagonists: muscles that resist the action of the prime mover

Page 41: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Tendinitis- a tendon (attaches muscle to bone) becomes inflamed and swollen after injury or repeated stress during activity

• Muscle strain- connective tissues are overstretched and the degree of damage and seriousness varies

Page 42: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Botulinum toxin- blocks stimulation of muscle fibers, paralyzing muscles•“Botox” to temporarily smooth wrinkles by not allowing to move facial muscles

• Steroids- (+) increase muscular strength and used for medical purposes, (-) cause changes of opposite sex and damage internal organs

Page 43: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

• Muscular Dystrophies• Missing proteins

• Muscles weaken and degenerate

• Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease• A duplicate gene

• Weakens hands and feet, and tendon reflexes

• Myotonic Dystrophy• An extending gene

• Muscle weakness and irregular heartbeats

• Hereditary Idiopathic Dilated Cardiomyopathy• A glitch

• Rare form of heart failure in actin

Page 44: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.
Page 45: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.
Page 46: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.
Page 47: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.
Page 48: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.
Page 49: By: Kendra Iverson & Sarah Bender. Muscle- fibrous tissue with the ability to contract, producing movement in or maintaining the position of an animal.

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