Kapitel 18 5e upplagan

The exercise was created 2023-10-11 by JosefinnNilsson. Question count: 35.




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  • Muscle A tissue that consist of contractile cells
  • Myosin A large protein that capture and convert the chemical energy of ATP into mechanical energy of movements
  • Actin Another contractile protein that works together with Myosin
  • Striated muscle cells muscle cells with transverse bands (striped appearance), like skeletal muscles and cardiac muscles
  • Motor unit A motor neuron and all the muscle fibres it innervates
  • Unstriated muscle cells Smooth muscle cells, use actin and myosin but these are not organized into sarcomeres. They are used in organs like blood vessels and intestine
  • Dense bodies The place where the actin filaments attach to in the cytoplasm and the inner surface of the cell membrane
  • Single-unit smooth muscle Muscle cells are electrically coupled by gap junctions --> depolarised and contract together
  • Multi-unit smooth muscle Have few or non gap junction which makes them work as independent units, can be activated by hormones or local chemical stimuli or neurally
  • Tonic smooth muscle Maintain contraction force for long periods and have no spontaneous contraction or action potential
  • Phasic smooth muscle Contract rapidly and produce spontaneous contractions or action potential from cell to cell through gap junctions
  • Muscle fibres long cylindrical cells with many nuclei, part of the skeletal muscle
  • Sacrolemma Muscle fibres cell membrane
  • Myofibrils Cylindrical part that the muscle fibre is built of
  • Sacromere The portion of a myofibril between two Z discs
  • Thick filament One of two myofilament contained by the myofibril, that mainly composed of the protein myosin and connects to the A-band of each Sacromere
  • Thin filament The second part of the myofilament that mainly is composed of actin like two chins wrapped around each other in a helix shape
  • Cross-bridges The heads on the Myosin molecule that generates the force of contraction while binding to actin
  • Titin molecule that attaches to both the Z disc and M line and spans the distance between them
  • Nebulin an inelastic molecule that specifies the length of the thin filament to optimise the overlap between thin and thick filaments
  • Obscurin Protein that binds with proteins in the M line and links to sarcoplasmic reticulum to maintain the structure of the sarcomere
  • Troponin, Tropomyosin (TN, TM)Protein molecules that are associated with the actin chains of the thin filaments, regulating the process of contraction by controlling whether or not the myosin cross-bridge can interact with the thin filaments
  • Excitation- contraction coupling The relationship between depolarisation and contraction
  • Intramuscular connective tissues The component that hold together the various components of the muscle
  • Tendons Connect muscles to the bones and other skelatal elements
  • Antagonist pair The muscle can only contract to shorten not to lengthen again by its own power, which makes the muscle pairs pulling in different directions very important
  • Isometric contraction When the muscle is not shortened but stay the same length, to stay steady in an unmoving posture
  • Concentric contraction When the muscle is actively shortened, like when you lift a heavy book your biceps muscle shortens to decrease the angle at your elbow.
  • Eccentric contraction When the tissue is being forcefully lengthened by an external force, which makes the muscle both trying to contract and lengthen at the same time
  • Isotonic contractions When the muscle is under the same tension by the muscle allowing a contraction at a prescribed and carefully controlled force or speed
  • Twitch The mechanical response of muscles to a single action potential --> Fast cross-bridge binding and unbinding
  • Tetanic contraction When multiple actions potentials arrive at the same time in the span of a single twitch, the muscle when got no time to relax between the twitches
  • Load- velocity relationship The speed of the contraction is increased by the load (how heavy) the thing you lift is
  • Twitch fibres Muscle fibres that generate action potentials that give rise to muscle twitch
  • Summation When several stimuli come together and add up to a larger contraction

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