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Chapter 9- Muscles and Muscle Tissue

1.

What are the types of muscle tissue

skeletal, smooth, cardiac

2.

Which type of muscle tissue are attached to bone and skin, are striated, voluntary, contract rapidly, and require nervous system stimulation?

skeletal muscle

3.

What type of muscle tissue is only in the heart, striated, can contract without nervous system stimulation, and is involuntary?

cardiac muscle

4.

What type of muscle tissue is also called visceral, is not striated, can contract without nervous system stimulation, is involuntary, and found in the walls of hollow organs?

smooth muscle

5.

What type of muscle tissue is multinucleated?

skeletal muscle

6.

What special characteristic of muscle tissue is the ability to receive and respond to stimuli?

excitability

7.

What special characteristic of muscle tissue is the ability to shorten forcibly when stimulated?

contractility 

8.

What special characteristic of muscle tissue is the ability to be stretched?

extensibility

9.

What special characteristic of muscle tissue is the ability to recoil to resting length?

elasticity

10.

What are the important functions of muscle?

movement of fluid or bones; maintain posture and body position; stabilizing joints; heat generation 

11.

What are the additional functions of muscles?

protect organs; form valves; control pupil size; causes goosebumps

12.

Each muscle is served by what?

one artery, one nerve, and one or more veins

13.

What is the most external part of skeletal muscle - a dense, irregular connective tissue that surrounds the entire muscle?

epimysium

14.

What is the fibrous connective tissue that surrounds fascicles (groups of muscle fibers) in skeletal muscle?

perimysium

15.

What is the fine areolar connective tissue surrounding each individual muscle fiber/cell?

endomysium

16.

Skeletal muscle attaches in at least what two places?

origin and insertion

17.

What type of attachment in skeletal muscle occurs when the epimysium is fused to the periosteum of bone or the perichondrium of cartilage?

direct 

18.

What type of attachment in skeletal muscle occurs when connective tissue wrappings extend beyond the muscle as rope-like tendon or sheetlike aponeurosis?

indirect 

19.

What is the plasma membrane of a skeletal muscle fiber/cell called?

sarcolemma

20.

What is the cytoplasm called in a skeletal muscle fiber?

sarcoplasm

21.

What are the modified structures called in a skeletal muscle fiber?

myofibrils, sarcoplasmic reticulum, and T tubules

22.

In skeletal muscle, what is the lighter region in the middle of the dark A band, where filaments do not overlap?

H zone

23.

In skeletal muscle, what is the line of protein myomesin that bisects the H zone?

M line

24.

In skeletal muscle, what is the coin shaped sheet of proteins on the midline of the light I band that anchors thin filaments and connects myofibrils to one another?

Z disc (line)

25.

Which filaments run the entire length of the A band?

thick filaments

26.

Which filaments run the length of the I band and partway into the A band?

thin filaments

27.

What is the region between two successive Z discs called?

sarcomere

28.

What is the smallest contractile unit (functional unit) of muscle fiber?

sarcomere

29.

What are the thin filaments called that extend across the I band and partway into A band, and are anchored to Z discs?

Actin

30.

What are the thick filaments called that extend the length of the A band and connect at the M line?

Myosin 

31.

Myosin heads contain 2 smaller, light polypeptide chains that act as ______  _______ during contraction.

cross bridges

32.

What are the regulatory proteins that bind to actin?

tropomyosin and troponin 

33.

What links thin filaments to proteins of the sarcolemma; and are mutated in someone with muscular distrophy? 

Dystrophin

34.

What functions in regulation of intracellular calcium levels, stores and releases calcium to allow muscles to contract?

sarcoplasmic reticulum

35.

What are continuations of the sarcolemma, increase the muscle fiber's surface area, penetrate the cell's interior at each A band-I band junction, and associate with paired terminal cisterns to form triads that encircle each sarcomere?

T tubules

36.

In the triad, what conducts impulses deep into the muscle fiber?

T tubules

37.

During contraction, thin filaments slide past thick filaments, and actin and myosin overlap more.  This is called?

sliding filament model of contraction

38.

What occurs when myosin heads bind to actin?

cross bridges 

39.

What forms and breaks several times, ratcheting thin filaments towards the center of the sarcomere?

cross bridges

40.

What must happen for skeletal muscle to contract?

activation (must generate action potential in the sarcolemma) and excitation-contraction coupling (action potential is propagated along the sarcolemma and calcium levels rise briefly)

41.

What does the sarcoplasmic reticulum release to bind to troponin?

calcium

42.

What happens when calcium/potassium enter/leave the cell?

It becomes depolarized 

43.

When calcium binds to troponin, what is exposed?

myosin-binding sites on actin

44.

What binds to actin, causing contraction to begin?

myosin heads 

45.

Action potential travels along what, causing the sarcoplasmic reticulum to release calcium?

T tubules