Biology
5th Edition
ISBN: 9781260487947
Author: BROOKER
Publisher: MCG
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Chapter 45, Problem 4TY
Summary Introduction
Introduction: The three types of muscle tissue in vertebrates are cardiac muscle, smooth muscle and skeletal muscle. The skeletal muscle is present throughout the body. It is directly involved in locomotion. It can generate action potentials in response to a stimulus. This results in an increased calcium ion concentration in the cytosol, which triggers force generation.
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With regard to muscle contraction, which of the following is an INCORRECT statement with regard to the interactions of filaments that occur in the sarcomere?
A. When muscles are relaxed tropomyosin blocks binding sites on actin subunits, which keeps cross-bridges from forming.
B. The myosin heads conduct a power stroke motion to slide when bound to actin, to move the "thin" filaments towards the center of the sarcomere.
C. During contraction, actin subunits are removed from the ends of the "thin" filaments to shorten actin polymers, thus reducing the length of the sarcomere.
D. "Thick" filaments are anchored at the M-line, while "thin" filaments are anchored at the Z-line.
E. Numerous myosin heads engage with the actin filaments simultaneously, such that there is no back-slipping during the contraction process.
In muscle cells, magnesium ions compete with calcium ions for binding sites on troponin molecules. If a person has too high a concentration of magnesium ions in the blood, magnesium ions can prevent calcium ions from binding troponin.
A) What effect would this have on muscle contraction (strengthen, weaken, or no effect)?
B) Use your knowledge of how muscle fibers contract to explain your answer in part A.
When sarcomeres contract during muscle contraction, which of the following occurs?
A.
The myosin filaments lengthen.
B.
The myosin filaments "walk" along the actin microfilaments.
C.
The myosin filaments shorten.
D.
The actin filaments shorten.
Chapter 45 Solutions
Biology
Ch. 45.1 - Prob. 1CCCh. 45.2 - Prob. 1CCCh. 45.2 - Prob. 1CSCh. 45.2 - Prob. 2CSCh. 45.3 - What is the normal function of the PPAR- protein...Ch. 45.3 - CoreSKILL What was the hypothesis proposed by...Ch. 45.3 - CoreSKILL Assume that the mean weight of both...Ch. 45 - Prob. 1TYCh. 45 - Prob. 2TYCh. 45 - Prob. 3TY
Ch. 45 - Prob. 4TYCh. 45 - The function of ATP during muscle contraction is...Ch. 45 - The function of Ca2+ in skeletal muscle...Ch. 45 - Stimulation of a muscle fiber by a motor neuron...Ch. 45 - Muscle fibers that have a large number of...Ch. 45 - Which of the following statements about movement...Ch. 45 - Prob. 10TYCh. 45 - Compare the structural and functional features of...Ch. 45 - Describe as many types of animal locomotion as you...Ch. 45 - Prob. 3CQCh. 45 - List and briefly describe the steps in the...Ch. 45 - Discuss the three types of muscle tissues found in...
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- The function of Ca2+ in skeletal muscle contraction is toa. cause an allosteric change in myosin so it detaches from actin.b. provide the energy necessary for the movement of the cross-bridge.c. expose the myosin-binding sites on the thin filaments.d. bind to tropomyosin.e. do a and c only.arrow_forwardCalmodulin is found in smooth muscle cells and performs a similar function to troponin in striated muscle fibers. However, calmodulin not only gets activated by Ca2+ but also slows the release of Ca2+ from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. How might this difference relate to the different kinds of contractions smooth muscles do in comparison to striated muscles?arrow_forwardIf a muscle cell had very short T-tubules, how much tension would the muscle fiber create, relative to a normal muscle fiber? Assume sarcoplasmic reticulum can still react to activity at the neuromuscular junction. a)Less tension would be created. b) No difference in tension creation. c) More tension would be created. d) No tension would be created.arrow_forward
- if, in a laboratory, a skeletal muscle cell receives a single stimulus to contract, it produces a single muscle twitch. If we quickly fire another stimulus for the muscle to contract, prior to the muscle fully relaxing, then we have a condition of: A. seizure B. none of the above C. complete tetanus D. temporal summation E. relaxation The _________________ phase of the Sliding Filament Model of Contraction occurs when myosin and actin separate from one another. A. cocking of the myosin head B. cross bridge detachment C. cross bridge formation D. action potential E. calcium release During contraction, the bulk of calcium comes from the?arrow_forwardWhich of the following statements about the Ca2+ release channels in the sarcoplasmic reticulum is false? a.They are also called ryanodine receptors. b.They are one-tenth the size of the voltage-gated Ca 2+channels. c.They are opened by Ca2+release channels in the transverse tubules. d.They permit Ca 2+ to diffuse into the sarcoplasm from the sarcoplasmic reticulum.arrow_forwardThe function of ATP during muscle contraction is toa. cause an allosteric change in myosin so it detaches from actin.b. provide the energy necessary for the movement of the cross-bridge.c. expose the myosin-binding sites on the thin filaments.d. do all of the above.e. do a and b only.arrow_forward
- Unlike skeletal muscle cells, cardiac muscle cells________." A do not use the sliding filament mechanism of contraction B are not striated C do not rely on an influx of Ca+2 for contraction to occur D do not require neural stimulation to contractarrow_forwardWhen a muscle fiber is stretched from 60% of its optimal length to Lo, what change or changes are happening on the cellular level (MULTIPLE SELECT)? A. Increased calcium release from the SR B. Increased firing of action potentials from the alpha motor neuron C. Increased rate of myosin ATPase activity D. Increased number of actin-myosin bridges E. Increased stretch on titin, producing more passive forcearrow_forwardMyosin binds to actin, then bends. What is ATP needed for next? A. to pump the Ca++ “keys” back into the sarcoplasmic reticulum B. to replace the strap and cover the binding sites C. to give feedback to the neuron that contraction occurred D. to un-bind myosin from actin and re-set for another powerstroke.arrow_forward
- What event causes a troponin-tropomyosin complex to regain its original shape in muscle relaxation? a. stimulation of ACh receptors b. diffusion of Na+ back into transverse tubules c. return of Ca2+ into the sarcoplasmic reticulum d. breaking of the bond with tropomyosinarrow_forwardThe sliding filament mechanism describes the process during which: a. actin and myosin slide relative to each other b. sarcomeres slide relative to each other c. troponin and tropomyosin slide relative to each other d. muscle fibers slide past each otherarrow_forwardWhich of the following statements is true?a. Fast fibers have a small diameter.b. Fast fibers contain loosely packed myofibrils.c. Fast fibers have large glycogen reserves.d. Fast fibers have many mitochondriaarrow_forward
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