MUSCLE BASICS 101
Part 1
Muscles are one of those things that most of us take completely for
granted, but they are incredibly important for two key reasons:
Muscles are the "engine" that your body uses to propel itself.
Although they work differently than a car engine or an electric motor,
muscles do the same thing -- they turn energy into motion.
It
would be impossible for you to do anything without your muscles.
Absolutely everything that you conceive of with your brain is expressed
as muscular motion. The only ways for you to express an idea are with
the muscles of your larynx, mouth and tongue (spoken words), with the
muscles of your fingers (written words or "talking with your hands") or
with the skeletal muscles (body language, dancing, running, building or
fighting, to name a few).
Because muscles are so crucial to
any animal, they are incredibly sophisticated. They are efficient at
turning fuel into motion, they are long-lasting, they are self-healing
and they are able to grow stronger with practice. They do everything
from allowing you to walk to keeping your blood flowing!
When
most people think of "muscles," they think about the muscles that we can
see. For example, most of us know about the biceps muscles in our arms.
But there are three unique kinds of muscle in any mammal's body:
Skeletal muscle is the type of muscle that we can see and feel.
When a body builder works out to increase muscle mass, skeletal muscle
is what is being exercised. Skeletal muscles attach to the skeleton and
come in pairs -- one muscle to move the bone in one direction and
another to move it back the other way. These muscles usually contract
voluntarily, meaning that you think about contracting them and your
nervous system tells them to do so. They can do a short, single
contraction (twitch) or a long, sustained contraction (tetanus).
Smooth muscle is found in your digestive system, blood vessels,
bladder, airways and, in a female, the uterus. Smooth muscle has the
ability to stretch and maintain tension for long periods of time. It
contracts involuntarily, meaning that you do not have to think about
contracting it because your nervous system controls it automatically.
For example, your stomach and intestines do their muscular thing all day
long, and, for the most part, you never know what's going on in there.
Cardiac muscle is found only in your heart, and its big features
are endurance and consistency. It can stretch in a limited way, like
smooth muscle, and contract with the force of a skeletal muscle. It is a
twitch muscle only and contracts involuntarily.
In this
article, we will look at the different types of muscles in your body and
the amazing technology that allows them to work so well. From here on,
we will focus on skeletal muscle. The basic molecular processes are the
same in all three types.
Skeletal-muscle Basics
Skeletal muscle is also called striated muscle, because when it is
viewed under polarized light or stained with an indicator, you can see
alternating stripes of light and dark.
Skeletal muscle has a
complex structure that is essential to how it contracts. We will tease
apart a skeletal muscle, starting with the largest structures and
working our way to the smaller ones.
The basic action of any
muscle is contraction. For example, when you think about moving your arm
using your biceps muscle, your brain sends a signal down a nerve cell
telling your biceps muscle to contract. The amount of force that the
muscle creates varies -- the muscle can contract a little or a lot
depending on the signal that the nerve sends. All that any muscle can do
is create contraction force.
A muscle is a bundle of many
cells called fibers. You can think of muscle fibers as long cylinders,
and compared to other cells in your body, muscle fibers are quite big.
They are from about 1 to 40 microns long and 10 to 100 microns in
diameter. For comparison, a strand of hair is about 100 microns in
diameter, and a typical cell in your body is about 10 microns in
diameter.
A muscle fiber contains many myofibrils, which are
cylinders of muscle proteins. These proteins allow a muscle cell to
contract. Myofibrils contain two types of filaments that run along the
long axis of the fiber, and these filaments are arranged in hexagonal
patterns. There are thick and thin filaments. Each thick filament is
surrounded by six thin filaments.
Thick and thin filaments are
attached to another structure called the Z-disk or Z-line, which runs
perpendicular to the long axis of the fiber (the myofibril that runs
from one Z-line to another is called a sarcomere). Running vertically
down the Z-line is a small tube called the transverse or T-tubule, which
is actually part of the cell membrane that extends deep inside the
fiber. Inside the fiber, stretching along the long axis between
T-tubules, is a membrane system called the sarcoplasmic reticulum, which
stores and releases the calcium ions that trigger muscle contraction.
Part 2 tomorrow
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