Transcript Monday Oct
26 October 2009
This Week in Physiology:
Wednesday Quiz: 1 Question based
on Today’s Lecture
Lab: Muscle Physiology #1
Lectures: Ch. 9 Muscle Physiology
Increasing tension in a whole muscle
• Frequency of stimulation of motor neuron
• Activate larger motor units
• Recruitment: activate more motor units
• These factors influence actual tension
– Fiber length (length-tension) relationship
– Fiber diameter
– Level of fatigue (state of activity)
Muscle Metabolism
• Fiber types
– Speed of myosin ATPase
– Metabolic sources of ATP
– Timing of fatigue
• Muscles in action
– Causes of Fatigue
– Training and fiber type
– Creatine supplements
Migratory fowl?
Fig. 09.24b
Comparison of contraction time (measured?): extraocular muscle
(IR, internal rectus), gastrocnemius (G), and soleus (S)
Classes of Myofibers based on Twitch Duration
The muscle fibers express different myosins:
• Fast twitch = rapid hydrolysis of ATP means
crossbridges cycle faster
• Slow twitch = slower hydrolysis, isozyme
catalyzes the reaction slower
3 Sources of ATP in muscle
Classes of Myofibers based on
Metabolism and Enzyme profiles
• Oxidative: at peak activity rely on full aerobic
cellular respiration
– many mitochondria, enzymes for oxidative
phosphorylation, numerous capillaries, lots of
myoglobin (red)
• Glycolytic: at peak activity rely on glycolysis
– few mitochondria, many glycolytic enzymes, large
store of glycogen, fewer capillaries, little
myoglobin (white)
Type I
What are the causes of
fatigue?
Type IIA
Depends on the type of
activity…
Type IIB
Causes of fatigue
• High intensity, short duration exercise
– Conduction failure in t-tubules
– Lactic acid accumulation
– Accumulation of ADP and inorganic phosphate
• Low intensity, long duration exercise
–
–
–
–
As above, and
Depletion of muscle glycogen
Low plasma glucose (hypoglycemia)
Dehydration
• Control pathways: “willpower”
– Common in couch potatoes
Response to training
• Resistance training
Type II change enzyme profiles
Type II add more actin and myosin
Type II increase CS area (hypertrophy)
• Endurance training
– Type I increases vascularity
– Type I increase number of mitochondria
Read section of
King et al., 1999
that deals with
analysis of muscle
biopsy material in
subjects taking
Andro or placebo.
Fig. 09.24b
Fig. 09.26
Relationship between
recruitment and fiber type
Sources of fuel with moderate exercise
Creatine phosphate, then oxidative phosphorylation (OP) from
glycogen, then OP from blood glucose, then blood fatty acids. If
intense, switch to glycolysis… then take a breather… oxygen
debt
A 1998 Review on the
Use of Creatine as a
Nutritional Supplement
Fig. 09.03
What accounts for the slow dynamics?
How are actin and myosin anchored?
Figure 9.34
Sources of calcium?
Slow!!!
Benefit?
Comparison:
How does tension diminish?
Thank God for latch state!
Crucial for long-term tension of
sphincters.