Term
What can be found in muscle nerves? |
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Definition
Axons of: alpha/gamma motor neurons, proprioceptors |
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Term
What is the difference between extra/intrafusal muscle cells |
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Definition
Extra - normal contractile Intra- within spindle |
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Term
how do muscle cells hypertrophy? |
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Definition
Their satellite cells respond to stimulus and divide, then fuse with muscle cells to form larger muscle cell. |
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Term
what muscle fiber types can be interconverted? |
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Definition
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Term
what type of neuron innervates skeletal muscle? |
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Definition
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Term
what is the difference between the muscle spindle and the golgi tendon organ? What sort of nerve fibers exit these? |
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Definition
1) Spindle conveys stretch info, while golgi tendon organ conveys force info 2) GSA's. type Ia and II innervate spindles; type Ib innervates golgi tendon organs |
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Term
What does a gamma motor neuron do? |
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Definition
Adjusts the lengths of spindle cells (muscle) |
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Term
which organelles are not located in the periphery of a muscle fiber? |
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Definition
Glycogen granules, mitochondria, smooth ER |
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Term
What are the various components of the sarcomere? |
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Definition
A band - the area of myosin M line - down the middle of the myosin H band - the area of myosin w/ no actin overlap I band - the area of actin w/ no myosin overlap Z line - the plate connecting sarcomeres |
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Term
1) Does troponin or tropomyosin bind Ca++? What are its subunits? 2) Does troponin or tropomyosin actually interfere with actin-myosin binding? |
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Definition
1) Troponin - its subunits are Tn T (binds tropomyosin), Tn I (inhibits actin/myosin interaction), and Tn C (binds Ca ++) 2) Seems to be a combination of both, mostly tropomyosin |
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Term
what is the z disc composed of ? |
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Definition
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Term
what are the functions of 1) dystrophin and 2) desmin? |
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Definition
dystrophin links the actins to integrins desmin links z disks together in ADJACENT myofibrils (this is why striations are |
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Term
which signal stimulates satellite cell proliferation? |
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Definition
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Term
at which point in the muscle powerstroke cycle is Pi bound to the actin head? |
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Definition
Only when the myosin head is returning to its pre-actin-bound conformation |
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Term
what type of receptors couples t-tubule depolarization to Ca++ release from SR? |
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Definition
Dihydropyridine receptor responds to voltage change, causes ryanodine receptor to be an open Ca++ channel |
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Term
what is the equation for muscle power? Muscle load of maximum efficiency? |
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Definition
P= v*F P_max at 30% F_max |
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Term
what are the differences between ventricular and purkinje cardiac cells? |
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Definition
Purkinjes are longer, fatter, have less striations and more glycogen. |
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Term
what is the mechanism of actin-myosin cross bridge activating in cardiac muscle? |
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Definition
Troponin-C binding Ca removes troponin I and tropomyosin from locations where they inhibit actin-myosin cross bridges. |
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Term
what is the difference between between t-tubules in skeletal and cardiac muscle? |
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Definition
in cardiac, t-tubules are located at z-line instead of the A/I |
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Term
how are dhydropiridine and ryanodine receptors coupled in cardiac muscle? |
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Definition
by Ca++, which enters sarcoplasm via dhp and activates rdn. Note that this makes the Ca++ pumps much more important to get Ca++ outside the cell so the SR Ca++ channels don't activate. |
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Term
what is the effect of norepinephrine on cardiac tissue? |
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Definition
Increases PKA activity, which phosphorylates myosin, phospholambin (SR pump) and dihydropiridine receptor, increasing activity of all - increasing both contractile force and velocity while shortening contractile time. |
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Term
how does increasing rate of cardiac contraction increase contractility? |
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Definition
It increases lingering Ca++ in sarcoplasm |
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Term
What is the effect of digitalis on 1) heart contractility and 2) heart rate? |
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Definition
1) increases contractility 2) no effect on rate - doesn't increase rate of Ca exiting sarcoplasm (no phospholambin phosphorylation), doesn't increase cross-bridge cycling (no myosin phosphorylation). |
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Term
what is a positive inotropic agent? |
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Definition
Increases contractility inos=fiber |
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Term
which sorts of muscle cells exhibit gap junctions? |
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Definition
Cardiac and smooth muscles |
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Term
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Definition
An axonal enlargement where the axon contacts a smooth muscle |
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Term
Which neurotransmitters are used in smooth muscle? What are their effects? |
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Definition
Both epinephrine and Ach are used in smooth muscle (depending on autonomic innervation) |
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Term
what is stress relaxation in a smooth muscle? |
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Definition
Increases length w/o increasing tension |
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Term
how are actin/myosin crossbridges stimulated in smooth muscle? |
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Definition
Calmodulin/Ca++ causes myosin phosphorylation via myosin light-chain kinase |
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Term
what is the effect of epinephrine on smooth muscle contraction? |
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Definition
If B2 adrenergic receptors are present, the MLCK is phosphorylated and thus inactivated, so the muscle relaxes. |
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Term
Which receptor does norepinephrine agonise in cardiac muscle? In smooth? |
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Definition
Cardiac - B1, leading to PKA phosphorylating myosin light chains and phospholambin, among other things. Smooth - a1, leading to PLC-mediated IP3 release. Note that B1-AdR isn't present in smooth muscle, but B2 is - so epinephrine causes increase in cAMP, but norepinephrine doesn't |
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Term
what are chromaffin cells? |
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Definition
These are cells of the adrenal medulla that release epinephrine |
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Term
What is the postsynaptic Ach receptor for parasympathetic 1) preganglionic and 2) pre-effector axon terminals? |
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Definition
1) nicotinic cholinergic - only goal is to depolarize the post-synaptic neuron. No real 2nd messenger needed.
2) muscarinic - signals something to the cell to upregulate or downregulate its activity. Thus linked to Gq (1,3,5) or Gi (M2,4) systems. |
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Term
what is the axon reflex? How else can reflexes occur without CNS involvement? |
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Definition
Injury stimulates an afferent axon to stimulate (efferently) nearby blood vessels to dialate - without any CNS involvement (no interneurons, nothing). Reflexes can also occur with ganglial organization, especially in the gut. |
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Term
What is the micturition reflex? |
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Definition
full bladder causes parasympathetic stimulation (M1) of ditrusor muscle, and inhibiton (M2) of sphinctor. |
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Term
What is the nucleus tractus solitarius? |
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Definition
Afferent information is processed here - communicates with hypothalamus so afferents evoke and efferent response |
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Term
which adrenergic receptor has a higher sensitivity to norepinephrine than to epinephrine? |
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Definition
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Term
Where are parasympathetic neurons not found? |
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Definition
In the limbs - or anywhere there's skin, skeletal muscle, or bone. |
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Term
What is the mechanism by which NO is secreted? What are its effects? |
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Definition
Secreted by endothelial cells in response to Ach (from parasymp). Causes GC receptor to activate in nearby smooth muscle cell, producing cGMP and leading to relaxation (vasodilation). This one way the symp. and parasymp. systems have opposing effects! |
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Term
What is the mechanism of sildenafil? |
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Definition
This inhibits the phosphodiesterase enzymes in corpus cavernosum smooth muscle. As a result, cGMP levels stay elevated in response to NO, and the blood vessels dialate. |
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Term
Do endothelial cells contribute to constriction or vasodilation of blood cells? |
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Definition
Both! Thromboxane A2, endothelins constrict. |
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Term
What is the typical physiologic stimulus for NO secretion? |
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Definition
Sheer stress on endothelial cells from high-pressure fluid flow |
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Term
What couples activated TK to its downstream substrates? |
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Definition
Coupling proteins with SH2 domains that bind to the autophosphorylated tyrosines of the TK |
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Term
What couples EGFR to RAS activation? |
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Definition
GRB2 binds (P)EGFR, and binds SOS which stimulates GDP-RAS to swap in a GTP, becoming active. Ras is a serine/threonine kinase |
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Term
What are the activators of c-fos and c-jun? |
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Definition
c-fos: ERK c-jun: p38 MAPK, JNK |
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Term
How does the EPO/EPOR pathway function? |
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Definition
JAK is bound to EPOR, and becomes active TK upon EPO binding. Phosphorylates STAT, a transcription factor which leads to increased erythopoiesis. |
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Term
What signalling system does p28^v-sis disrupt? |
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Definition
PDGF-B/EGFR binding - PDGF-B is primary growth factor in serum; EGFR is a TK. p28^v-sis mimics PDGF |
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Term
How does gp65^v-arb B2 interfere with mitogens? |
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Definition
The protein is homologous to the TK portion of EGFR and is constitutively active |
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Term
What is the biological effect of c-fos activation? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the biological effect of c-jun activation? |
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Definition
differentiation, inflammation, apoptosis |
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Term
What are the three branches of PDK signalling? |
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Definition
1) PKC (shared branch with PLC signalling) 2) AKT (PKB) - leads to GLUT4 translocation, cyclin phosphorylation 3) ser-thr kinase that results in ribosome phosphorylation |
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Term
What are the two branches downstream of IRS-1 ? |
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Definition
MAPK signalling via grb-2, PI3K signalling via PI3K->PDK |
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Term
How is Atrial natriuretic factor released? |
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Definition
Its zymogen, atrial peptigen, is cleaved by proteolysis and released |
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Term
What are two possible kinases that target MLCK? What are two possible ligands for upstream receptor that could result in MLCK phosphorylation? |
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Definition
1) PKA and PKG 2) Epinephrine and ANF |
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Term
What is the difference between the NO-activated and ANF-activated guanylyl cyclases? |
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Definition
The NO-activated one is cytosolic, soluble |
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Term
what is the route of activation of the soluble guanylyl cyclase? |
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Definition
1st NO increases affinity for substrate by binding to heme of activator portion, extra NO's bind to other allosteric sites, increasing efficiency |
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Term
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Definition
oxygenated HB with NO bound to a cysteine - can release NO in blood if O2 drops to dilate blood vessels. |
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Term
What is the effect of NO on platelets |
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Definition
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