Energy for Muscle Contraction Direct Phosphorylation Aerobic Respiration Anaerobic Glycolysis.

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Energy for Muscle Contraction Direct Phosphorylation Aerobic Respiration Anaerobic Glycolysis

Transcript of Energy for Muscle Contraction Direct Phosphorylation Aerobic Respiration Anaerobic Glycolysis.

Page 1: Energy for Muscle Contraction Direct Phosphorylation Aerobic Respiration Anaerobic Glycolysis.

Energy for Muscle Contraction

Direct Phosphorylation

Aerobic Respiration

Anaerobic Glycolysis

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Vocabulary

• Aponeurosis: A sheetlike fibrous membrane that binds muscles together or as a means of connecting muscle to bone.

• Motor Unit: A single motor neuron and all the muscle fibers it stimulates.

• Ligament: A sheet or band of tough, fibrous tissue connecting bones or cartilages at a joint

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Vocabulary

• Epimyusium: The external sheath of connective tissue surrounding a muscle. (outermost)

• Perimysium: The fibrous sheath enveloping each of the primary bundles of skeletal muscle fibers. (Middle)

• Endomysium: The connective tissue layer surrounding an individual skeletal muscle fiber. (Innermost)

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Direct Phosphorylation

• Uses Creatine Phosphate – Found only in muscle – Regenerates ATP

from ADP– CP exhausted in 20

seconds– No Oxygen Used

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Aerobic Respiration

• Generates ATP in mitochondria

• Uses Oxygen• Oxidative

Phosphorylation• Glucose is broken

down to CO2 and H2O– 36 ATP per 1 glucose– Slow process– Lasts for hours

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Anaerobic Respiration

• Glycolysis uses no oxygen

• Occurs in cytosol• Broken down to pyruvic

acid which is converted to lactic acid when oxygen cannot keep up to demand

• 2 ATP per glucose• 30-60 seconds

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Energy Sources

• First: Glucose• Second: Pyruvic

Acid• Third: Fatty Acids

stored in adipose tissue

• Fourth: Amino Acids from protein catabolism

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Muscle Fatigue

• Muscle cannot contract even when stimulated

• Weaker and weaker until it stops

• Results from Oxygen debt

• Build up of lactic acid and lack of creatine phosphate and ATP reserves

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Oxygen Debt

• Prolonged workouts

• Oxygen uptake can no longer keep up

• Results in rapid or deep breathing

• Muscle may quit entirely

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Hitting the Wall

• Bonk• Glycogen depletion• Extreme fatigue• Remedied by

carbohydrates

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Movements

• Flexion• Extension• Hyperextension

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Movements

• Abduction• Adduction• Circumduction

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Movement

• Plantar Flexion• Dorsiflexion

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Movement

• Rotation• Medial Rotation• Lateral Rotation

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Movement

• Supination• Pronation

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Movement

• Inversion • Eversion

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Review Sarcomere

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More Vocabulary:

• Sarcolemma: Plasma membrane of a muscle cell

• Myofibril: Long organelles that fill the cell and are composed of myofilaments

• Myofilaments: threadlike protein fibers– Thick filaments = Myosin– Thin Filaments = Actin

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Muscle Characteristics

• Skeletal: Multinucleate, Striated, Long Thin Cells. Attached to bones. Voluntary

• Cardiac: Branched, Uninucleate, Striated, Intercalated discs. Walls of Heart. Involuntary

• Smooth: Fusiform (tapered), Uninucleate, No striations. Involuntary.

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Vocabulary• A Bands = Dark bands of a myofibril• I Bands = Light bands of a myofibril• Z Disc or Z Band= Interruption in the

center of the I Band• M Line: Holds thick filaments together and

can be seen in the center of the H zone• H Zone: Light central area of sarcomere

that lacks actin (also bare zone) this disappears during contraction when fibers overlap

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Muscle Contraction Review

1. Motor neuron is stimulated and the action potential travels along the neuron.

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Muscle Contraction

2. Acetylcholine is released from the neuron end plate into the neuromuscular junction

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Muscle Contraction

3.Acetylcholine diffuses across the neuromuscular junction gap

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Muscle Contraction

4. The muscle fiber membrane is stimulated, impulse travels through transverse tubules to sarcoplasmic reticulum

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Muscle Contraction

5. Sarcoplaspic reticulum releases Ca+2 into the sarcoplasma

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Muscle Contraction

6. Calcium binds to troponin on the actin (thin) filaments allowing myosin (thick) filaments to form cross-bridges

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Muscle Contraction

7&8 Power Stroke occurs and repeats as long as calcium is present and the muscle shortens

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Muscle Contraction

9. Motor neuron stimulation stops. Cholinesterase causes the breakdown of acetylcholine

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Muscle Contraction

10. Calcium ions are pumped out into the sarcoplasmic reticulum using active transport

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Muscle Contraction

11& 12 Linkages between actin and myosin are released. The muscle relaxes to its pre-stimulated length

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Quiz Tuesday – Muscle Physiology