cardiac muscle Flashcards

1
Q

properties of cardiac muscle

A

small, branched cells joined by intercalated discs

striated

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2
Q

does cardiac muscle have troponin

A

yes

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3
Q

does cardiac muscle have sarcomeres

A

yes

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4
Q

are cardiac cells electrically coupled

A

yes

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5
Q

3 components of intercalated discs

A

interdigtating folds- in folds at the end of cells that increase the surface area of cell-cell connection
mechanical junction-2 types: fascia adherens and desmosomes
electrical junctions- electrically coupled by gap junctions. Enables each cell to stimulate the next

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6
Q

gap junctions

A

present in intercalated discs of adjacent cells
low-resistance pathway between cells
cell-cell conductance by electrical coupling

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7
Q

description of blood supply in cardiac muscle

A

requires continuous O2 for mitochondria to produce ATP
rich capillary supply
short diffusion distance for O2 and waste

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8
Q

2 types of electrical activity

A

pace maker potential and prolonged cardiac action potential

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9
Q

3 ion conducting mechanisms

A
progressive reduction in K+ permemability- K+ channels that open at repolarisation and close at negative potentials
Funny channel (F current) = Na+ permeable ion channel that opens at negative potentials (unlike most VGCs). These depolarise the membrane
T-type calcium channels: VGCCs that contribute to final depolarisation boost of the pacemaker potential
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10
Q

what is contraction in cardiac muscle cells in response to

A

membrane action potential that propagates through the T-tubules

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11
Q

L type Ca 2+ channels

A

(long lasting current)
Modified DHP receptors that act as the voltage sensor in skeletal muscle excitation-contraction coupling
Enable depolarization of the cell due to influx of extracellular Ca2+
VGCs

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12
Q

Where does Ca2+ for contraction come from

A

entering Ca2+ through L type channels not only depolarises the membrane and increases cytosolic Ca2+, it also triggers release of much more Ca2+ from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. This is because ryanodine receptors on external surface of sarcoplasmic reticulum are Ca2+ channels, and not opened by voltage as in skeletal muscle, instead by bindng of trigger Ca2+ in the cytosol

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13
Q

Any differences between skeletal muscle filament activation, cross bridge cycling etc and in cardiac muscle

A

No

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14
Q

when does contraction end

A

when cytosolic Ca2+ concentration restores to its low value by Ca2+ ATPase pumps in the sarcoplasmic reticulum and sarcolemma (cell membrane of muscle cell)

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15
Q

Sequence of excitation-contraction coupling

A

Membrane depolarizzed by Na+ as an AP begins
Depolarisation opens L-type channels in T tubules
Trigger Ca2+ enters cytosol, contributing to cell depolarisation. Binds to and opens ryanodine receptor
Ca2+ flows into cytosol, cross bridge cycling occurs
Once Ca2+ has been restored to same level, membrane is repolarized when K+ exits the cell to end the action potential

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16
Q

uses of cardiac troponins

A

released into the blood when heart muscle is damaged

used to detect myocardia infaction

17
Q

Troponin I

A

inhibitory

18
Q

Troponin c

A

calcium binding

19
Q

Troponin T

A

tropomyosin binding