❚Molecular mechanism of contraction ❚Molecular characteristics of contractile proteins ❚Interaction between myosin and actin on muscle contraction… [619457]

Skeletal Muscle

Outline
❚Structure
❚Molecular mechanism of contraction
❚Molecular characteristics of contractile
proteins
❚Interaction between myosin and actin on
muscle contraction
❚Neuromuscular junction

Skeletal muscle
❚Skeletal muscle makes up 40 % of body mass
❚Smooth muscle, cardiac muscle, make up 5-10 % of
body mass
❚Skeletal muscle – voluntary contraction, striated, multi-
nucleate, terminal cell type
❚Smooth muscle -involuntary contraction, non-striated,
uninucleate, can undergo mitosis
❚Cardiac muscle , involuntary contraction, striated, uni- or
binucleate nuclei, slow dividing, terminal cell type

Nomenclature
❚Sarco lemma- plasma membrane
❚Sarco plasmic reticulum- endoplasmic
reticulum
❚Muscle fiber- cell
❚Myofibril-subcellular fibers
❚Sarcomere – functional unit of myofibril

Muscle zones
❚A band = thick and thin filaments
❚I band = thin filaments only
❚Z line = actin attachment point
❚H band = thick filaments only

Molecular Mechanism of
Contraction
❚Sliding filament theory of contraction
❙Shortening of the sarcomere is caused by
increased overlap between thick and thin filaments, not shortening of thick and thin
filaments

Sliding Filament Theory of Muscle Contraction

Optimal overlap between thick and thin filaments

Molecular Characteristics
of Contractile Filaments
❚Myosin (thick filament)
❙actin binding domain
❙ATPase site
❙ATP binding
❙molecular hinges

Myosin:
Actin binding site
ATP/ADP binding sites
ATPase site

Actin (thin) filament
❚Polymerized chain of G actin -c a l l e d
filamentous actin (F actin). Double helix
❚tropomyosin – wraps around actin,
covers myosin binding domain
❚troponin – 3 subunits attached at periodic
locations along tropomyosin fiber
❙tropomysin binding domain
❙calcium binding domain

Interaction Between Actin and
Myosin to Cause Contraction
❚Pure actin and myosin will bind to each other readily
❚If troponin-tropomyosin complex added, inhibits actin
and myosin binding, therefore active binding sites on
actin filament are blocked by troponin-tropomyosin complex
❚When calcium ions bind to troponin, active binding sites
are uncovered and conformational change allows myosin
to bind to actin
❚As sites become uncovered, myosin binds to actin

Cross-bridges on either side of the thick filament face each other.

isometric
isotonic

Excitation-contraction
coupling
❚All muscle tissue is irritable,ie.,
depolarizes when electrically stimulated
❚Nicotinic cholinergic receptors on the
sarcolemma are ligand-regulated Na+
channels
❚Therefore, when Ach binds, Na+enters
and muscle depolarizes
❚The motor nerves innervating skeletal
muscle originate in the ventral horn of the spinal cord (somatic motor NS) and are cholinergic

Motor unit=motor nerve and fibers that it innervates. One motor
nerve may innervate 100 muscle fibers, but each muscle fiber is
innervated by only one nerve

End plate potential

T-tubules
❚Application of small amounts of electrical current around
Z line, but not other areas, is capable of producing a
contraction
❚Anatomical studies in frog muscle indicated a series of
sarcolemma invaginations that carry current to inner myofibrils-T-tubules
❚Each T-tubule bordered on either side by swollen region
of sarcoplasmic reticulum, lateral or terminal cisterna(e);
together this structure is called atriad
❚Cardiac muscle similar, 1 T-tubule and 1 lateral cisterna
= Diad

AP causes Ca2+
channels in SER to open

Neuromuscular junction
❚Specialized synapses between cholinergic motor
neurons and skeletal muscle
❚Each motor neuron may innervate 1-100
individual muscle fibers
❚Each muscle fiber innervated by only one motor
neuron
❚1 motor neuron and all muscle fibers it
innervates is called a motor unit
❚Acetylcholinesterase- enzyme in the cleft that
degrades acetylcholine

Recruitment of Motor Units
❚Each muscle fiber contracts in an “all-or-
nothing” fashion
❚If so, then how do whole muscles
contract in a graded or proportional
fashion?
❚Answer: Differential recruitment of motor
units.

Clinical Correlations
❚Drugs that interfere with neuromuscular junction
❘nicotine- binds irreversibly to nicotinic receptors
❘Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors- neostigmine,
prolonged muscle contraction
❘Curare- poison dart frog skin, blocks Ach
receptors, muscle relaxation
❙Strychnine- inhibits glycine input to motor neurons in
spinal cord. Normally, glycine inhibits motor neurons. Strychnine causes disinhibition of motor neurons,
over-activation of motor neurons and convulsions

Clinical Correlations
(con’t)
❚Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)- Also known
as Lou Gehrig’s disease. Scar tissue forms around motor neurons causing death of motor
neurons and muscle weakness. 90% of cases
have no cause
❚Myasthenia gravis – autoimmune disease that
attacks muscle nicotinic receptors

ATP conservation
❚If muscle is stimulated, ATP levels don’t
change
❚Creatine phosphate is a muscle storage
form of phosphate

Cardiac muscle

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