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skeletal, cardiac, smooth |
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are long, tiny fibers that are bundled into somewhat bigger fibers. These bigger fibers will group together to make a muscle |
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Every muscle fiber is formed from fused _______ that turn into _________ |
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Muscle fibers have multiple |
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Each myofibril is made up of _____ which are arranged end to end. |
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Sarcomeres are made up of ____ and ____ filaments |
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Sarcomeres were discovered through |
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some bands move and others dont |
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Four parts of a myofibril |
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Thin filaments extend from |
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Actin myofilaments are made up of |
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In thick myofilaments, myosin is organized into _(#)__ protein subunits. Each complex has a long, thin tail made of two supercoiled ________ segments of two myosin heavy chains. At one end are two heads, which belong to a myosin ____ chain. In addition, ____ myosin light chains and ____ regulatory light chains associate with the heads. |
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Proteolytic enzymes _____ and _____ cleave myosin complexes at particular locations |
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Trypsin cleaves myosin into two pieces: |
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light meromyosin heavy meromyosin |
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Light meromyosin contains |
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Heavy meromyosin contains |
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head and light myosin chains |
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Papain cleaves heavy meromyosin into three pieces: |
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Myosin complexes will polymerize spontaneously in vitro to reconstitute ____ filaments with an organization identical to those found in muscle. |
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Myosin complexes join the thick filament with their tails |
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Myosin complexes will polymerize spontaneously in vitro to reconstitute ____ filaments with an organization identical to those found in muscle. |
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Myosin complexes join the thick filament with their tails |
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sarcomeres shorten when actin and myosin filaments move past each other |
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The tension produced by the muscle is maximal when |
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the overlap between thick and thin filaments allows for the largest number of myosin cross bridges to bind to actin |
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Two reasons why tension decreases with increased length |
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1. Less overlap, less cross-bridges 2. Thin filaments begin to collide with each other |
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-the length of the muscle doesn't change -Tension increases and decreases |
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-muscle is allowed to shorten during tension generation -tension being generated is constant -brief dynamic period when the muscle returns to rest |
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What are responsible for graded muscle contractions |
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At the minimum contraction, has |
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one motor neuron and one muscle fiber |
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The larger the motor unit, the greater the |
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Free calcium ions in the cytosol regulate |
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the state of muscle contraction |
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Glycerin-extracted muscle fibers generate tension when.... They relax when.... |
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-they are exposed to Ca and ATP -Ca is removed, even if ATP is still present |
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The force generated by a skinned muscle fiber varies with the |
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concentration of Ca in the surrounding medium. Force increases with increasing Ca, up to 10-6 M |
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Function of tropomyosin and troponin |
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regulate binding between myosin cross bridges and actin thin filaments |
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binds to actin and blocks myosin binding sites |
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binds to actin and troponin C |
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In the absence of Ca, troponin T binds to ______ and troponin I binds to _____. Both troponin I and T bind to |
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tropomyosin actin troponin C |
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When troponin C binds to Ca, its bond to troponin I becomes _____ and the bond between tropinin I and actin is ______. |
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Both Ca and ATP are required for muscles to |
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Relaxation only occurs when |
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ATP is present and Ca is not |
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Muscle fibers contract when a _______ potential at the _______ _______ causes a _______ action potential in the fiber |
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postsynaptic neuromuscular junction propogated |
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An action potential in the motor neuron causes an ______ ______ potential in the muscle fiber which gives rise to a _______ muscle AP |
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excitatory postsynaptic propagated |
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transient, all or none contraction |
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The threshold for potential contraction |
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Electrotonic transmission |
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causes a large depolarization that spontaneously moves from the point |
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Behavior of a muscle fiber |
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extensions of the plasma membrane that reach deep into the interior of each muscle fiber. Associated with the sarcoplasmic reticulum |
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The process of spreading an AP along the entire length of a muscle fiber involves |
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The process of spreading Ca2+ throughout entire sarcoplasm of a muscle fiber involves the |
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The concentration of free Ca in a muscle fiber can be measured using |
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Tension only rises after (in relation to Ca) |
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Ap is over and intracellular Ca has begun to decline |
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The release of Ca2+ is due to the interaction of two membrane proteins: |
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ryanodine and dihydropyridine receptors |
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Dihydropyridine receptors span __ ______ and come in clusters of __. Each receptor associates closely with the extracellular foot of a ________ receptor, which extends from the ____ membrane. |
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_______ inside the SR binds to Ca |
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Near the Z disks in mammals and amphibian skeletal muscle, T tubules at the terminal _____ from two sarcomeres form _____. |
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Feet connect terminal cisternae with __ ______ in each triad. |
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Ca concentration: Voltage sensitive ________ receptors and ryanodine receptors work together. linking the depolarization of the T tubules to the opening of the ____ channels in the ____ membrane. A ____ ATPase in the SR membrane requesters Ca from the _______, and the calsequestrin inside the SR bind ___. This reduces the amount of free ionic ___ inside the SR. |
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dihydropyridine Ca SR myoplasm Ca Ca |
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= sarcoplasm = cytoplasm of the muscle fiber |
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One of the lowest concentration intracellular ions |
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Ryanodine receptor is a ________ gated Ca channel – opens when the other opens, causes the physical change |
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The quickest twitch muscles we have are associated with our |
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Muscle fibers can gerenate ATP ________ – fermentation. The product is |
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protein that acts as a cellular store for phosphate |
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Three ways to generate ATP |
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Fast twitch fibers generally use glycolysis and fermentation, so do not rely on oxygen Slow twitch fibers rely on oxidative phosphorylation – can generate a lot of ATP |
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Lactate should be high in |
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fast twitch because use fermentation |
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