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sliding filamen

Human Anatomy, Physiology, and Medicine. Anything human!

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sliding filamen

Postby victor on Fri Jun 03, 2005 1:24 pm

Someone please explain about muscle sliding filamen theory in a simple way...I have a difficulities in understanding that topic in my textbook. :?
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Postby ewokgod on Sun Jun 05, 2005 8:27 am

the process is as following:

1. In ACTIN thin filament, Ca++ stimulates troponin to pull tropomyosin away from the myosin binding site (tropomyosin normaly 'covers' the binding site with myosin in relaxed muscle state).
Tropomyosin molecules lie in the groove between 2 actin chains. Troponin lies at the intervals along tropomyosin molecule.

2. Having the site exposed, actin can bind with myosin. Having adequate ATP, contraction can occur.
Contraction process:
- myosin crossbridge binds with actin sub unit at the binding site.
- if ATP is present, myosin binds to ATP and actin is released.
- ATP is then hydrolised to ADP, the energy released recocks the myosin crossbridge.
- recocked myosin crossbridge binds with the next actin sub unit, by moving through a short arc (the "power stroke"), pulling the actin filament.

3. When the contraction is completed, Ca++ is pumped back to sarcoplasmic reticulum and tropomyosin covers the actin-myosin binding site. Muscle relaxes.

Thats as simple as i can make them. Hopefully it helps.
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thanks

Postby victor on Sun Jun 05, 2005 1:26 pm

Wow..this is really helpful. I'll print it out and start to read them..thanks a lot. :D
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