Term
List the anatomical components that make up a muscle fiber. |
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Definition
Plasmalemma, Sarcolemma, Satellite Cells, Sarcoplasm, Transverse Tubules, Sarcoplasmic Reticulum, Myofibrils |
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Definition
plasma membrane; part of the sarcolemma |
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Definition
composed of the plasmalemma and the basement membrane |
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Definition
btw. plasmalemma and basement membrane; involved in growth and development of skeletal muscle |
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Definition
fluid part of muscle fiber; contains dissolved proteins, minerals, glycogen, fats, and necessary organelles |
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Definition
extensions of the plasmalemma laterally through a muscle fiber; interconnected; allow nerve impulses to be transmitted to individual myofibrils |
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Definition
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Definition
made up of basic contractile elements of skeletal muscle |
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Term
Components of a motor unit |
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Definition
The alpha motor neuron and all of the muscle fibers it innervates |
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Term
What are the steps in excitation-contraction coupling? |
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Definition
1)Action potential (AP) starts in brain 2)AP arrives at axon terminal, releases acetylcholine (ACh) 3)ACh crosses synapse, binds to ACh receptors on plasmalemma 4)AP travels down plasmalemma, T-tubules 5)Triggers Ca2+ release from sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) 6)Ca2+ enables actin-myosin contraction |
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Term
What is the role of Ca2+ in muscle contraction? |
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Definition
Ca2+ binds to troponin on the thin filament, Troponin-Ca2+ complex moves tropomyosin, Myosin binds to actin, Contraction can occur |
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Term
Describe the sliding muscle filament theory. |
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Definition
1)Ca2+ binds to troponin 2)Troponin-Ca2+ moves tropomyosin out of the way 3)Myosin binds to actin 4)Myosin head pulls actin toward sarcomere center (power stroke) 5)Filaments slide past each other (sarcomeres, myofibrils, muscle fiber all shorten) |
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Term
How do muscle fibers shorten? |
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Definition
Filaments slide past each other |
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Term
Characteristics of Type I muscle fibers |
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Definition
50% of fibers in ave. muscle, peak tension is 110ms (slow twitch), Slower myosin ATPase=slower contraction cycling, less developed SR, smaller neuron (<300 fibers), high aerobic endurance, recruited for low-intensity aerobic activities, require O2 for ATP production, Efficiently produce ATP |
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Term
Characteristics of Type II muscle fibers |
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Definition
peak tension is 50ms (fast twitch), Fast myosin ATPase=fast contraction cycling, more highly developed SR, faster Ca2+ release, larger neuron (>300 fibers), fatigue quickly, Produce ATP anaerobically, Type IIa-more force, short, high-intensity endurance events, Type IIx-seldom used for everyday activities, short, explosive sprints |
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Term
What is the role of genetics in determine the proportions of muscle fiber types and the potential for success in selected activities? |
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Definition
Muscle fiber characteristics determined early in life; Alpha-motor neuron determines the muscle fiber type by innervating that muscle fiber; Type I fibers are more suited for prolonged endurance activities and Type II are better suited for high-intensity,short,explosive activities; Intermediate fibers are have the ability to shift to Type I/II based on training; Muscles lose type II motor units as we age |
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Term
Describe the relationship btw. muscle force development and the recruitment of type I/II motor units |
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Definition
Less force=fewer/smaller motor units; More force=more/larger motor units; Recruitment->type I->type IIa->type Iix |
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Term
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Definition
Muscle shortens (sarcomere shortens, filaments slide toward center), joint movement is produced (dynamic contractions) |
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Definition
Muscle lengthens (cross-bridges form, but sarcomere lengthens), joint movement (weight lifting->ex: lowering heavy weight) |
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Term
Isometric/Static Contraction |
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Definition
Muscle generates force, but length stays the same, joint angle doesn't change, myosin cross-bridges form and recycle-no sliding |
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Term
What two mechanisms are used by the body to increase force production in a single muscle? |
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Definition
Length-tension relationship and Speed-force relationship |
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Term
Length-tension relationship |
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Definition
1)Optimal sarcomere length=optimal overlap 2)Too short or too stretched=little or no force develops |
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Term
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Definition
1)Concentric=max. force development decreases at higher speeds 2)Eccentric=max. force development increases at higher speeds |
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Term
What is the optimal length of a muscle for maximal force development? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the relation btw. maximum force development and the speed of shortening (concentric) and lengthening (eccentric) contractions? |
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Definition
During concentric contractions, max. force development decreases progressively at high speeds. Eccentric contractions allow max. force development to increase progressively at low speeds. |
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Term
What is ATP and how is it of importance in metabolism? |
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Definition
ATP=adenosine triphosphate (high-energy compound). It is of importance in metabolism, because it is the useable storage form of energy we derive from food. |
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Term
What is the primary substrate used to provide energy at rest? |
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Definition
50% carbohydrates and 50% fats at rest are used to provide energy |
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Term
What is the primary substrate used to provide energy during high-intensity exercise? |
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Definition
During high-intensity exercise we use more carbohydrates |
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Term
What is the role of PCr in energy production? |
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Definition
(PCr=phosphocreatine or creatine phosphate); PCr's role in energy production is to regenerate ATP to maintain a relatively constant supply under resting conditions, and recycle ATP during exercise until it's used up. |
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Term
Describe the relationship btw. muscle ATP and PCr during sprint exercises. |
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Definition
During a sprint exercise, ATP is at a constant level, PCr declines steadily, because it's used to replenish depleted ATP. |
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Term
Describe the essential characteristics of the ATP-PCr system. |
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Definition
Anaerobic, Substrate-level metabolism, 1mol ATP/1mol PCr, 3-15s, Replenishes ATP stores during rest, recycles ATP during exercise until used up, ATP decreases (ADP increases) PCr increases, ATP increases PCr decreases |
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Term
Describe the essential characteristics of Glycolytic system (glycolysis) |
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Definition
Anaerobic, 2-3mol ATP/1mol substrate, 15s-2min., breakdown of glucose via glycolysis, Use glucose (1ATP) or glycogen (0ATP) as substrate, starts w/glucose-6-phosphate ends w/pyruvic acid |
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Term
Cons of the Glycolytic system (glycolysis) |
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Definition
Low ATP yield, Pyruvic acid converted to Lactic Acid due to lack of O2, Lactic acid impairs glycolysis/muscle contraction |
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Term
Pros of the Glycolytic system (glycolysis) |
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Definition
O2 is limited-still allows muscle to contract, sustain short-term, higher-intensity exercise than oxidative metabolism |
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Term
Describe the essential characteristics of the Oxidative system (oxidative phosphorylation) |
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Definition
Aerobic, 32-33ATP/glucose, 100+ATP/1FFA, steady supply for hrs., most complex, occurs in Mitochondria |
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Term
Why are the ATP-PCr and glycolytic energy systems considered anaerobic? |
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Definition
Considered anaerobic, because they contribute energy during short-burst activities lasting up to 2min.and during the early min. of longer high-intensity exercise |
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Term
What role does O2 play in the process of aerobic metabolism? |
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Definition
O2 helps to breakdown substrates which intern provides more energy |
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Term
Describe the by-products of energy production from the ATP-PCr system |
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Definition
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Term
Describe the by-product of energy production from the Glycolysis system |
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Definition
2-3mol ATP/1 mol substrate (glucose/glycogen) |
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Term
Describe the by-products of energy production from the Oxidative system |
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Definition
32-33mol ATP/1 glucose; 100+ATP/1 FFA |
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Term
Describe the by-products of energy production from the Oxidative Glycolysis system |
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Definition
ATP yield the same; In presence of O2 pyretic acid is converted to Acetyl CoA |
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Term
Describe the by-products of energy production from the Oxidative Krebs-cycle system |
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Definition
1)1molecule glucose->2Acetyl CoA 2)1molecule glucose->2complete Krebs cycles 3)1molecule glucose->double ATP yield 4)2Acetyl CoA->2GTP->2ATP 5)NADH,FADH,H+ |
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Term
Describe the by-products of energy production from the Oxidative Electron Transport Chain |
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Definition
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Term
What is Lactic Acid and why is it important? |
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Definition
Lactic Acid is converted from pyruvic acid. It inhibits muscle contraction |
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Term
Discuss the interaction among the three energy systems w/respect to the rate at which energy can be produced and the sustained capacity to produce that energy. |
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Definition
1)ATP-PCr: 3-15s 2)Glycolysis: 15s-2min 3)Oxidative: 2min-long term exercise |
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Term
How do type I muscle fibers differ from type II fibers in their respective oxidative capacities? What accounts for those differences? |
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Definition
Type I fibers are more aerobic-have more mitochondria and higher concentrations of oxidative enzymes. Type II fibers are better suited for glycolytic energy production. Alpha neurons account for these differences |
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Term
What are the major divisions of the nervous system? What are their major functions? |
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Definition
1)CNS (brain, spinal cord) 2)PNS - Sensory (afferent; incoming), Motor (efferent; outgoing), Somatic (voluntary, to skeletal muscle) 3)Autonomic - involuntary - to viscera (sympathetic/parasympathetic) |
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Term
Name the different parts of a neuron |
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Definition
1) Cell body - contains nucleus, cell processes radiate out 2) Dendrites - receiver cell processes, carry impulse toward cell body 3) Axon - sender cell process, starts at the axon hillock, end branches, axon terminals, neurotransmitters |
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Term
Explain the resting membrane potential |
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Definition
The difference in electrical charges btw. outside and inside of cell (-70mV) |
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Term
What causes the resting membrane potential? |
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Definition
Uneven separation of charged ions (polarized) |
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Term
How is the resting membrane potential maintained? |
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Definition
1) Permeability of the membrane - more permeable to K+ so it moves more freely 2) Na+/K+ pump - more Na+ on the inside of cells and more K+ on the outside of cell (3 Na+ out for every 2 K+ in) |
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Term
Describe an action potential |
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Definition
a rapid and substantial depolarization of the neuron's membrane |
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Term
What is required before an AP is activated? |
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Definition
Membrane depolarization must occur and threshold must be reached |
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Term
Explain how an AP is transmitted from a presynaptic neuron to a post synaptic neuron |
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Definition
1) GP reaches threshold - AP occurs 2) Propagation occurs down axon 3) Reaches axon terminals 4) Synaptic vesicles release neurotransmitters into synaptic cleft 5) Diffuse across synaptic cleft to postsynaptic neurons receptors 6) Binds to postsynaptic receptors |
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Term
Explain how an AP is transmitted from a presynaptic neuron to a post synaptic neuron |
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Definition
1) GP reaches threshold - AP occurs 2) Propagation occurs down axon 3) Reaches axon terminals 4) Synaptic vesicles release neurotransmitters into synaptic cleft 5) Diffuse across synaptic cleft to postsynaptic neurons receptors 6) Binds to postsynaptic receptors |
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Term
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Definition
site at which a motor neuron communicates w/a muscle fiber |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
What brain centers have major roles in controlling movement, and what are these roles? |
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Definition
1) Primary motor cortex (frontal lobe, conscious control of skeletal muscle movement) 2) Basal ganglia (cerebral white matter, help initiate sustained/repetitive movement) 3) Cerebellum (controls rapid and complex movement) |
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Term
How do the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems differ? |
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Definition
Sympathetic prepares body for exercise, while parasympathetic opposes sym. (rest/digest) |
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Term
What is the sympathetic systems significant role in performing physical activity? |
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Definition
Prepares the body for stress/physical activity and can sustain the body and it's function |
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Term
What is the parasympathetics role in performing physical activity? |
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Definition
Helps the body to rest after physical activity |
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Term
Explain how reflex movement occurs in response to touching a hot object? |
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Definition
1) Stimulus sensed by sensory receptors 2) Sensory AP sent on sensory neurons to CNS 3) CNS interprets sensory info. sends out response 4) Motor AP sent out on alpha motor neuron 5) Motor AP arrives at ske |
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Term
Describe the role of the muscle spindle in controlling muscle contraction |
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Definition
Muscle spindle is innervated by gamma motor neurons. It synapses in the spinal cord w/an alpha motor neuron and triggers reflex muscle contraction. Helps to prevent further (damaging) stretch |
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Term
Describe the role of the Golgi tendon organ in controlling muscle contraction |
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Definition
When stimulated by excessive tension the golgi tendon organs inhibit agonists and excite antagonists to prevent excessive tension in muscle/tendon to reduce potential for injury |
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Term
What is an endocrine gland, and what are the functions of hormones? |
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Definition
Gland that secrets their hormones directly into the blood where they act as chemical signals throughout the body. Functions of hormones to regulate cell/organ activity |
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Term
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Definition
1) Derived from cholesterol, lipid soluble (diffuse through membrane) 2) Receptors are found inside cell (cytoplasm or nucleus) 3) Direct gene activation (Hormone - receptor binds to DNA) 4) Hormone receptor regulates mRNA synthesis (protein synthesis) |
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Term
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Definition
1) not lipid soluble (can't cross membrane) 2) Divided into 2 groups: Protein/peptide hormones-most non steroid hormones, from pancreas, hypothalamus, pituitary gland; A.A. derived hormones-thyroid hormones, adrenal medulla hormones (epinephrine, norepinephrine) 3) Receptors on cell membrane -> second messengers (carry out hormone effects, intensify strength of hormone signal) 4) Common second messengers (cyclic adenosine monophosphate, cyclic guanine monophosphate, Inostiol triphosphate, diacylglycerol) |
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Term
How can hormones have very specific functions when they reach nearly all parts of the body through the blood? |
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Definition
Because each cell has specific hormone receptors possessed by the target tissues so they can bind only specific hormones |
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Term
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Definition
increase number of receptors during high plasma concentration = sensitization |
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Term
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Definition
decrease the number of receptors during high plasma concentration = desensitization |
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Term
How do target cells become less sensitive to hormones? |
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Definition
an increased volume of a specific hormone decreases the number of cell receptors available to it. With fewer receptors there are fewer hormone molecules that can bind. |
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Term
How do target cells become more sensitive to hormones? |
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Definition
when there's a prolonged presence of large amounts of a hormone the number of available receptors increases |
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Term
What are secondary messengers and what role do they play in hormonal control of cell function? |
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Definition
signal relaying molecules that help intensify the strength of the signal. Can trigger numerous cellular processes |
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Term
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Definition
stimulates fat metabolism |
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Term
Triiodothyronine/Thyroxine |
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Definition
1) Increase FFA metabolism 2) Increase in metabolic rate of all tissues 3) Increase protein synthesis 4) Increase number and size of mitochondria 5) Increase glucose uptake by cells 6) Increase rate of glycolysis/gluconeogenesis |
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Term
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Definition
1) short term - stimulates T3/T4 2) Long term - decreases T4 |
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Term
Epinephrine/Norepinephrine (catecholamines) |
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Definition
1) increase heart rate/contractile force/BP 2) Increase glycogenolysis/FFA 3) increase Blood flow to skeletal muscle |
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Term
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Definition
1) increase gluconeogenesis 2) Increase FFA mobilization/protein catabolism 3) anti - inflammatory, anti - immune |
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Term
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Definition
1) lowers blood glucose 2) increase glucose transport into cells 3) increase synthesis of glycogen, protein, fat, inhibits gluconeogenesis |
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Term
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Definition
increase water reabsorption at kidneys |
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Term
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Definition
1) increase Na+ retention by kidneys/water retention via osmosis/ increase K+ excretion |
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Definition
stimulates RBC production |
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Definition
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