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A-level Biology - 3.4.4 Skeletal Muscles as Effectors

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Muscles act as effectors, meaning they produce a response to a stimulus. They are stimulated to contract by nerve impulses transmitted from motor neurones, enabling movement or action.

Muscles act as _____ and are stimulated to contract by _____

Muscles act as effectors and are stimulated to contract by neurones

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Key Terms

Term
Definition

Muscles act as _____ and are stimulated to contract by _____

Muscles act as effectors and are stimulated to contract by neurones

What is skeletal muscle made up of?

Muscle fibres (large bundles of long cells)

What is sarcolemma?

Cell membrane of muscle fibre cells

What are transverse (T) tubules?

Folds = bits of sarcolemma fold inwards across muscle fibres and stick into sarcoplasm

What do T tubules do?

Help to spread electrical impulses throughout sarcoplasm so they reach all parts of muscle fibre

What is the sarcoplasmic reticulum?

Network of internal membranes that runs through sarcoplasm

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TermDefinition

Muscles act as _____ and are stimulated to contract by _____

Muscles act as effectors and are stimulated to contract by neurones

What is skeletal muscle made up of?

Muscle fibres (large bundles of long cells)

What is sarcolemma?

Cell membrane of muscle fibre cells

What are transverse (T) tubules?

Folds = bits of sarcolemma fold inwards across muscle fibres and stick into sarcoplasm

What do T tubules do?

Help to spread electrical impulses throughout sarcoplasm so they reach all parts of muscle fibre

What is the sarcoplasmic reticulum?

Network of internal membranes that runs through sarcoplasm

What does the sarcoplasmic reticulum do?

Stores and releases calcium ions needed for muscle contraction

Muscle fibres are _______

Muscle fibres are multinucleate

Name 2 things muscle fibres have lots of

Mitochondria

Provides ATP needed for muscle contraction

Myofibrils (cylindrical organelles)

Made up of proteins and are highly specialised for contraction

State what 1) is

State what 2) is

State what 3) is

State what 4) is

State what 5) is

Tendons are strong, fibrous connective tissues that attach muscles to bones. In the wrist and hand, they play a crucial role in transmitting the force from forearm muscles to move the fingers and hand.

What is skeletal muscle (aka striated, striped or voluntary muscle)?

Type of muscle you move

How is skeletal muscle attached to bones?

By tendons

Muscle Contraction

What do bones acts as when a pair of skeletal muscles contract and relax to move bones at a joint?

So act as levers, giving muscles something to pull against

Muscles that work together to move a bone are called ________ ____

antagonistic pairs

Muscles act in Antagonistic Pairs

State what muscle is agonist

Contracting muscle

Muscles act in Antagonistic Pairs

State what muscle is antagonist

Relaxing muscle

Describe what happens when your biceps contracts

Biceps contract (agonist), triceps relaxes (antagonist)

Pulls bone so your arm bends (flexes) at the elbow

Describe what happens when your biceps relaxes

Biceps relaxes (antagonist), triceps contracts (agonist)

Pulls bone so your arm straightens (extends) at the elbow

Myofibrils contain thick and thin ____ that ___ ___ ____ ____ to make muscles contract

Myofibrils contain thick and thin myofilaments that move past each other to make muscles contract

What are thick myofilaments made from?

Protein myosin

What are thin myofilaments made from?

Protein actin

State what 1) is

State what 2) is

State what 3) is

State what 4) is

State what 5) is

State what 6) is

Why do A-bands appear darker?

∵ contain thick myosin filaments & some overlap with actin filaments

Why do I-bands appear lighter?

∵ only contain thin actin filaments

The H-zone is the lighter region at the centre of A-band. Why is it lighter?

Only contains myosin filaments

The M-line is of ____ filaments

The M-line is middle of myosin filaments

What is a sarcomere?

Distance between Z-line to Z-line

What theory explains muscle contraction?

Sliding Filament Theory

Describe the sliding filament theory

Myosin and actin filaments slide over one another to make sarcomeres contract

Myofilaments don't contract

Simultaneous contraction of lots of sarcomeres means myofibrils and muscle fibres contract

Sarcomeres return to their original length as muscle relaxes

State what happens to lengths of A-bands, I-bands, H-zones, sacromeres when sacromeres contract

When sarcomeres contract, the A-bands stay the same length, while the I-bands, H-zones, and sarcomeres shorten as the muscle fibers slide over each other. This causes overall muscle contraction.

State what 1) is

State what 2) is

State what 3) is

State what 4) is

Describe the shape of myosin filaments' heads

Have globular heads that are hinged

| (Move back and forth)

State what the 2 binding sites on a myosin head are for

actin & ATP

What are the binding sites on actin filaments for & what are they called?

Myosin heads

Called actin-myosin binding sites

What does tropomyosin (found between actin filaments) help to do?

Helps myofilaments move past each other

In resting (unstimulated) muscle, why are actin-myosin binding sites blocked by tropomyosin?

So myofilaments can't slide past each other ∵ myosin heads can't bind actin-myosin binding site on actin filaments

Describe how muscles contract in detail

When action potential from motor neurone stimulates muscle cell, it depolarises sarcolemma

Depolarisation spreads down T-tubules

= sarcoplasmic reticulum releases Ca2+ into sarcoplasm

Influx of Ca2+ causes tropomyosin molecules to more, exposing binding sites

Myosin heads, have ADP attached, attach to binding site on actin, creating actin-myosin cross bridge

Ca2+ activate ATPase to hydrolyse ATP to ADP

Energy released causes myosin heads to bend, pulling actin filament

Another ATP molecule attaches to myosin head, causing myosin to detach from actin

With ADP myosin head can reattach to actin

Myosin head then reattaches to different binding sites further along actin

New actin-myosin cross bridge is formed & cycle is repeated

Describe what happens when muscle stops being stimulated (i.e. when excitation stops)

When muscle stops being stimulated, Ca2+ ions leave binding sites and moved by active transport back into sarcoplasmic reticulum

Causes tropomyosin molecules to move back & block actin-myosin binding sites

Muscles aren't contracted ∵ no myosin heads are attached to actin filaments

Actin filaments slide back to their relaxed position which lengthens sarcomere

Name the 3 main ways in which ATP is continually generated for

muscle contraction

Aerobic respiration

Anaerobic respiration

ATP-Phosphocreatine (PCr System)

How is most of ATP generated in aerobic respiration?

via oxidative phosphorylation in mitochondria

What type of excercise is aerobic respiration best for?

Long periods of low-intensity exercise

What type of excercise is anaerobic respiration best for?

Short periods of hard exercise

Why is anaerobic respiration only good for short periods of hard exercise?

ATP rapidly made by glycolysis

Lactate quickly builds up in muscle & = muscle fatigue

Describe how ATP is generated from the ATP-Phosphocreatine (PCr system)

ATP is made by phosphorylating ADP

Adding phosphate group from PCr

For what type of excercise is the ATP-PCr system best used for?

Short bursts of vigorous exercise

Why is the ATP-PCr system best used for short bursts of vigorous exercise?

PCr is stored inside cells and ATP-PCr system generates ATP very quickly

PCr runs out after a few seconds

ATP-PCr system is and ___

ATP-PCr system is anaerobic and alactic (doesn't form any lactate)

How is creatine (Cr) removed from the body?

Creatine (Cr) gets broken down into creatinine - removed from body via kidneys

In what types of people are creatinine levels higher in?

People who exercise regularly and those with high muscle mass

What can high creatinine levels sometimes indicate?

Kidney damage

Name 2 types of muscle fibres

Slow twitch

Fast twitch

Different muscles have different proportions of…

slow and fast twitch fibres

Name 6 differences between slow and fast twitch fibres

Sliding Filament Theory

  • During muscle contraction, the myosin filaments pull the actin filaments towards the center of the sarcomere.

  • The actin and myosin filaments slide over each other without changing their length.

  • This sliding causes the sarcomere to shorten, resulting in muscle contraction.

Role of Calcium Ions (Ca²⁺)

  • When a muscle cell is stimulated, calcium ions are released from the sarcoplasmic reticulum into the cytoplasm.

  • Calcium ions bind to troponin, causing a change in its shape and moving tropomyosin away from the myosin-binding sites on actin filaments.

  • This exposure allows the myosin heads to attach to actin, facilitating muscle contraction.

Name 3 things fast twitch contains

High conc. of enzymes used in anaerobic respiration

A store of phosphocreatine

High concentration of glycogen

What is used to reform phosphocreatine?

ATP