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Muscle Physiology Word Search Puzzle

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Flap 1 Flap 2
Motor unit  a single motor neuron and the muscle fibers it innervaes  
muscle fibers per motor unit  3-6 in hand and eye; 120-500 in large muscles of the back  
myoneural junction  junction of motor neuron and muscle; it loses its myelin sheath and divides into a number of terminal buttons or end-feet  
6 events at a myoneural junction (1-3)  1)Action potential travels over the axon terminal and triggers the entry and release of clcium into the terminal 2)Ca++ triggers the exocytosis of vesicles of Ach 3)Ach diffuses accross the space and binds with receptors in the muscle cell  
Events at a myoneural junction (4-6)  4)Binding brings about the opening of sodium channels generating an action potential in the muscle cell 5)Current flow throughout the muscle cell via the transvers (T) tubule system 6)Ach is broken down by acetylcholinesterase  
differences between a synapse and a myoneural junction  one to one transmission of acion potentials at a myoneural junction; myoneural junction is always excitatory  
three types of muscle tissue  smooth, cardiac, skeletal  
mesoderm  all 3 muscle cell types are derived from it  
contractile fibers  all 3 types of muscle cells are composed of them  
smooth muscle  elongated, lack cross striations, and under involuntary control, and have one nucleus which is located at the center of the cell  
smooth muscel cells control contraction of what  internal orans, walls of blood vessels, digestive system, ducts of reproductive glands, the ureters, the baldder, and skin  
myogenic  spontaneous muscle contraction  
neurogenic  muscle contraction induced through innervation  
cardiac muscel fiber characteristics  cross-striations, one centrally-lcated nucleus, involuntary control, bifurcated to form a synctium  
skeletal muscle fiber characteristics  elongated, multinucleate, voluntary control, well developed cross striations  
function of skeletal muscle  movement of bones, maintenance of body posture, facial expression, and breathing movements  
sarcolemma  plasma membrane in muscle cell  
fiber  muscle cell  
sarcoplasm  cytoplasm in muscle cell  
sarcoplasmic reticulum  endoplasmic reticulum in muscle cell  
Myofibril  a muscle fiber contains many small, round parallel bundles (100-1000s) called myofibril  
Myofilament  each myofibril is composed of still smaller units called myofilaments  
Actin  thin contractile protein in the muscle cell  
Myosin  thick contractile protein in the muscle cell  
Sarcomeres  the contractile proteins are arranged into compartments  
A bands  dark bands in myofilaments  
I bands  lighter bands in myofilaments  
Anisotropic  a bands  
Isotropic  I bands  
H zone  lighter central regions of the A bands contain only myosin (no myosin heads)  
Z line  where the actin filaments of adjacent sarcomeres join  
Actin filaments are composed of  actin, tropomyosin, and troponin  
G-actin  globular individual actin molecules  
F-actin  douple spherical chains (double helix) called fibrous actin  
Troposmyosin covers how many G-actin subunits  7  
Troponin I  unit that binds to actin  
Troponin T  portion that binds to tropomyosin  
Troponin C  component that binds calcium (initiates contraction)  
Myosin filaments  thick myofilaments  
Light meromyosin  LMM filaments make up the rodlike backbone of the myosin filaments  
Heavy meromyosin  HMM filaments form the shorter globular lateral cross bridges (heads) which link  
Binding sites on the myosin cross bridge  actin binding site and an ATPase binding site  
Isometric contraction  when a muscle develops tension but does not shorten  
Isotonic contraction  a contraction in which the muscle shortens  
Twitch contractions  when an isolated muscle is attached to a device that senses and records changes in muscle length and the muscle then receives a single stimulus, the contraction response is referred to as a twitch  
Three phases of a twitch  1)latent period which is the time from actual stimulation until contraction begins 2)contraction period 3)relaxation period  
Wave summation or temporal summation  first muscle twitch is not completely over when the second one begins and thus the muscle is already in a partially contracted state when the second twitch begins, the degree of muscle shortening in the 2nd contraction is greater than with just a single m  
Tetanus  occures when the stimuli are applied in a very rapid succession and the contractions fuse together and cannot be distinguished one from the other  
Slow-twitch fibers  found mostly in the postural muscles such as in the back and legs and have a twitch duration of about 100msec; derive energy from oxidative metabolism; have small diameters, many mitochondria, many capillaries, small amounts of glycogen storage  
Red fibers  slow-twitch fibers; the red color is due to the high concentration of myoglobin which binds O2  
Fast-twicth fibers  found mostly in fine, skilled movements and twitch for about 7 msec; fatigue quickly; derive energy from glycolysis; large fibers, high storage of glycogen and few mitochondria  
White fibers  fast-twitch fibers; they are white because they contain little myoglobin  
Why is fast-twitch muscle fast?  has more sarcoplasmic reticulum than slow-twitch muscle; also has fast myosin  
Causes of muscle fatigue (first 2)  1)ATP use exceeds ATP production 2)lactic acid (H+) accumulation interferes with ATP production and muscle contraction  
Causes of muscle fatigue (second 2)  3)glycogen depletion and therefore hypoglycemia may occur 4)inhibition of excitation-contraction coupling. That means inhibition of release of Ca++ from the lateral sacs  
Sarcoplasmic reticulum of cardiac muscle  is not as extensive  
Intercalated disks  manner in which cardiac muscle cells are interconnected  
2 functions of intercalated disks  1)provide gap junctions that allow impulses to travel from one cell to another 2)provide desmosomes that anchor one cell to another  
Cardiac muscle cell refractory period  long absolute and relative refractory periods making tetanus impossible  
Automaticity  factors that increase intracellular Ca++ in the cardiac muscle such as catechoamines and digitalis, which slow the heart down, will increase the force of contraction. Cholinergic agents will decrease Ca++ concentrations and decrease the contraction force  
Contraction of cardiac muscle  the action potential does not release Ca++ from sarcoplasmic reticulum but is released from the extracellular fluid; the increase of Ca++ releases Ca++ in the sarcoplasmic reticulum (calcium induced calcium release)  
What smooth muscle lacks  sarcomeres, striations, t-tubule systems  
Contraction of smooth muscle  slower, requires less energy; innervated by neurons (autonomic nerves); other smooth muscle cells are not innervated and contract in response to hormones or local factors  
Smooth muscle mechanism  myosin-regulated; actin and myosin only interact when the myosin is phosphorylated  
Ca++ involvement in smooth muscle  intracellular messenger that sets off a seris of events that result in the phosphorylation of myosin. Most Ca++ comes from the extracellular fluid  
Ca++ to phosphorylation in smooth muscle tract  increased intracellular Ca++ binds to and activates calmodulin which binds to and activates another myosin kinase which phosphorylates myosin which binds with actin so cross-bridge cycling can begin  
Autonomic innervation of smooth muscle cells  postganglionic neurons travel across smooth muscle cell’s surface and release neurotransmitters from multiple bulges (varicosities) as an action potential passes along the axon.  
Varicosities  bulges on the postganglionic axon in smooth muscle cells that release neuro transmitters as an action potential passes along the axon  
Adrenergic receptors (alpha and beta)—effects on smooth muscle cells (norepinephrine)  Alpha(1) receptors--cause smooth muscles to contract or be stimulated; Beta (2) receptors—cause smooth muscles to relax or be inhibited