Chapter 49 Sensory
and Motor Mechanisms
Lecture Outline
Overview: Sensing and
Acting
·
The
origins of sensing date back to the appearance in prokaryotes of cellular
structures that sense pressure and chemicals in the environment and direct
movement in an appropriate direction.
·
These
structures have been transformed during the course of evolution into diverse
mechanisms that sense various types of energy and generate many different
levels of physical movement in response.
·
The
detection and processing of sensory information and the generation of motor
output provide the physiological basis for all animal behavior.
Concept 49.1 Sensory receptors transduce stimulus energy and
transmit signals to the central nervous system
The brain’s processing of sensory input and
motor output is cyclical rather than linear.
·
Sensing,
brain analysis, and action are ongoing and overlapping processes.
·
Information
is transmitted through the nervous system in the form of all-or-nothing action
potentials.
°
What
matters is where action potentials go.
·
Sensations begin as different forms
of energy detected by sensory receptors.
°
This
energy is converted to action potentials that travel to appropriate regions of
the brain.
°
Once
the brain is aware of sensations, it interprets them, giving the perception of stimuli.
°
Perceptions
such as colors, smells, sounds, and tastes are constructions formed in the
brain and do not exist outside of it.
Sensory receptors transduce stimulus energy
and transmit signals to the nervous system.
·
Sensory reception begins with the detection
of stimulus energy by sensory receptors.
·
Most
sensory receptors are specialized neurons or epithelial cells that exist singly
or in groups with other cell types in sensory organs, such as eyes or ears.
°
Exteroreceptors detect stimuli
originating outside the body, such as heat, light, pressure, and chemicals.
°
Interoreceptors detect stimuli
originating inside the body, such as blood pressure and body position.
°
Sensory
receptors convey the energy of stimuli into membrane potentials and transmit
signals to the nervous system.
§
Sensory
receptors perform four functions in this process: sensory transduction,
amplification, transmission, and integration.
°
The
conversion of stimulus energy into a change in membrane potential of a sensory
receptor is sensory transduction.
°
The
change in membrane potential itself is receptor
potential.
§
Receptor
potentials are graded potentials; their magnitude varies with the strength of
the stimulus.
à
All
receptor potentials result from the opening or closing of ion channels in the
sensory receptor’s plasma membrane.
§
Many
sensory receptors are extremely sensitive.
à
Most
light receptors can detect a single photon of light.
à
Hair
cells of the inner ear can detect motion of only a fraction of a nanometer.
à
Chemical
receptors can detect a single molecule.
°
The
strengthening of stimulus energy by cells in sensory pathways is called amplification.
§
An
action potential conducted from the eye to the brain has about 100,000 times as
much energy as the few photons of light that triggered it.
§
Some
amplification occurs in the sensory receptors, and signal transduction pathways
involving second messengers often contribute to it.
§
Amplification
can also take place in the accessory structures of a complex sense organ.
·
The
conduction of sensory impulses to the CNS is transmission.
°
Some
sensory receptors transmit chemical signals to sensory neurons.
§
The
strength of the stimulus and receptor potential affects the amount of
excitatory neurotransmitter released by the sensory receptor.
°
Some
sensory receptors are sensory neurons.
§
The
intensity of the receptor potential affects the frequency of action potentials.
°
Many
sensory neurons spontaneously generate action potentials at a low rate.
§
Therefore,
a stimulus does not switch the production of action potentials on or off in
these neurons.
§
Rather,
it modulates action potential frequency.
·
The
processing, or integration, of
sensory information begins as soon as the information is received.
°
Receptor
potentials produced by stimuli delivered to different parts of a sensory
receptor are integrated through summation, as are postsynaptic potentials in
sensory neurons that synapse with multiple receptors.
°
Another
type of integration by receptors is sensory
adaptation, a decrease in responsiveness to continued stimulation.
°
The
integration of sensory information occurs at all levels within the nervous
system.
§
Complex
sensory structures such as eyes have higher levels of integration, and the CNS
further processes all incoming signals.
Sensory receptors are categorized by the type
of energy they transduce.
·
Mechanoreceptors respond to mechanical
energy such as pressure, touch, stretch, motion, and sound.
°
Bending
or stretching of a mechanoreceptor’s plasma membrane increases the membrane’s
permeability to sodium and potassium ions.
·
The
crayfish stretch receptor, the vertebrate hair cell, and the vertebrate stretch
receptor are examples of mechanoreceptors.
°
Muscle spindles respond to the stretching
of skeletal muscle, depolarizing sensory neurons and triggering action
potentials that are transmitted to the spinal cord.
§
Muscle
spindles and the sensory neurons that innervate them are part of the nerve
circuits that underlie reflexes.
°
The
mammalian sense of touch also relies on mechanoreceptors that are the dendrites
of sensory neurons, embedded in layers of connective tissue.
§
Receptors
that detect light touch are close to the surface of the skin, while receptors
responding to strong pressure and vibrations are in deep skin layers.
·
Chemoreceptors respond to chemical stimuli.
°
General
chemoreceptors transmit information about total solute concentration of a
solution, while specific chemoreceptors respond to specific types of molecules.
°
Osmoreceptors
in the mammalian brain are general receptors that detect changes in solute concentration
of the blood and stimulate thirst when osmolarity increases.
°
Internal
chemoreceptors respond to glucose, O2, CO2, and amino
acids.
°
Two
of the most sensitive and specific chemoreceptors known are present in the
antennae of the male silkworm moth.
§
They
detect the two chemical components of the female moth sex pheromone.
°
In
each example, the stimulus molecule binds to a specific site on the membrane of
the receptor cell and initiates changes in membrane permeability.
·
Electromagnetic receptors respond to various forms
of electromagnetic energy such as visible light, electricity, and magnetism.
°
Photoreceptors respond to the radiation
we know as visible light and are often organized into eyes.
°
Some
snakes have infrared detectors that detect body heat of prey.
°
Some
fishes generate electric currents and use electroreceptors to locate prey that
disrupt those currents.
°
Many
animals use Earth’s magnetic field lines to orient themselves as they migrate.
§
The
iron-containing mineral magnetite is found in the skulls of many vertebrates,
in the abdomen of bees, in the teeth of some molluscs, and in certain protists
and prokaryotes that orient to Earth’s magnetic field.
·
Thermoreceptors respond to heat or cold
and help regulate body temperature by signaling surface and body core
temperature.
°
Thermoreceptors
in the skin and in the anterior hypothalamus send information to the body’s
thermostat, located in the posterior hypothalamus.
·
Pain receptors, or nociceptors, are a class of naked dendrites in the epidermis.
°
Most
animals experience pain, although we cannot say what perceptions other animals
associate with stimulation of pain receptors.
°
Pain
is an important sensation, because the stimulus leads to a defensive reaction.
°
Different
types of pain receptors respond to different types of pain, such as excess
heat, pressure, or chemicals released from damaged or inflamed tissues.
°
Prostaglandins
increase pain by sensitizing receptors, lowering their threshold.
§
Aspirin
and ibuprofen reduce pain by inhibiting prostaglandin synthesis.
Concept 49.2 The mechanoreceptors involved with
hearing and equilibrium detect settling particles or moving fluid
·
Hearing
and balance are related in most animals.
·
Both
involve mechanoreceptors that produce receptor potentials when some part of the
membrane is bent by settling particles or moving fluid.
·
Statocysts are mechanoreceptors that
function in an invertebrate’s sense of equilibrium.
·
A
common type of statocyst consists of a layer of ciliated receptor cells
surrounding a chamber that contains one or more statoliths, grains of sand or other dense granules.
°
Gravity
causes the statoliths to settle to a low point in the chamber, stimulating
receptors in that location.
°
Many
jellies have statocysts at the fringe of their bell, giving them an indication
of body position.
·
Many
invertebrates have a general sensitivity to sound, although specialized
structures for hearing are less common than gravity sensors.
°
Sound
sensitivity in insects depends on body hairs that vibrate in response to sound
waves.
§
Different
hairs respond to different frequencies.
°
Many
insects have localized “ears,” with a tympanic membrane stretched over an
internal air chamber.
§
Sound
waves vibrate the tympanic membrane, stimulating receptor cells attached to the
inside of the membrane and resulting in nerve impulses that are transmitted to
the brain.
·
Some
moths can hear the high-pitched sounds that bats produce for sonar, and
undertake escape maneuvers.
In mammals, the sensory organs for hearing and
equilibrium are associated with the ear.
·
The
outer ear includes the external
pinna and the auditory canal, which collects sound waves and channels them to
the tympanic membrane.
·
From
the tympanic membrane, sound waves are transmitted through the middle ear.
°
In
the middle ear, three small bones, the malleus,
incus, and stapes, transmit
vibrations to the oval window and on
to the inner ear.
§
The
Eustachian tube connects the middle
ear with the pharynx and equalizes pressure between the middle ear and the
atmosphere.
·
The
inner ear consists of a labyrinth of
fluid-filled channels housed within the temporal bone of the skull.
°
The
cochlea is the part of the inner ear
concerned with hearing.
§
Structurally,
it consists of the upper vestibular canal and the lower tympanic canal, which
are separated by the cochlear duct.
§
The
vestibular and tympanic canals are filled with perilymph.
°
The
cochlear duct is filled with endolymph.
§
The
organ of Corti, which rests on the
basilar membrane, contains the mechanoreceptors of the ear, hair cells with
hairs projecting into the cochlear duct.
§
Many
of the hairs are attached to the tectorial membrane, which rests atop the hair
cells of the organ of Corti like a shelf.
§
Sound
waves make the basilar membrane vibrate, which results in bending of the hairs
and depolarization of the hair cells.
·
How
does the ear convert the energy of pressure waves traveling through air into
nerve impulses that the brain perceives as sound?
·
Vibrating
objects create percussion waves in the surrounding air.
°
These
waves cause the tympanic membrane to vibrate with the same frequency as the
sound.
·
The
three bones of the middle ear transmit the vibrations to the oval window, a
membrane in the cochlea’s surface.
°
The
stapes vibrates against the oval window, creating pressure waves in the
cochlear fluid.
§
The
round window functions to dissipate
the vibrations.
·
Vibrations
in the cochlear fluid cause the basilar membrane to vibrate.
°
The
hair cells brush against the tectorial membrane, generating an action potential
in a sensory neuron.
·
Pitch is based on the location
of the hair cells that depolarize.
°
The
basilar membrane is not uniform along its length.
°
Every
region of the basilar membrane is most affected by a particular vibration
frequency.
°
The
actual perception of pitch occurs in the brain.
·
Volume
is determined by the amplitude of the sound wave.
°
A
large amplitude sound wave causes a more vigorous vibration of the basilar
membrane, a greater bending of the hairs on the hair cells, and more action
potentials in the sensory neurons.
The inner ear also contains the organs of
equilibrium.
·
Behind
the oval window is a vestibule that contains two chambers, the utricle and saccule.
°
The
utricle opens into three semicircular
canals.
·
The
utricle and saccule respond to changes in head position relative to gravity and
movement in one direction.
°
Hair
cells are arranged in clusters and project into a gelatinous material
containing otoliths.
§
When
the head’s orientation changes, the hair cells are tugged on, sending nerve
impulse along a sensory neuron.
§
The
mechanism is similar to the function of statocysts in invertebrates, and the
utricle and saccule are considered specialized types of statocysts.
·
The
semicircular canals respond to rotation or angular movements of the head.
°
The
mechanism is similar to that associated with the utricle and saccule.
A lateral line system and inner ear detect
pressure waves in most fishes and aquatic amphibians.
·
Fishes
and amphibians lack cochleae, eardrums, and openings to the outside.
°
However,
they have saccules, utricles, and semicircular canals, structures homologous to
the equilibrium sensors of human ears.
·
Vibrations
of the water caused by sound waves are conducted through the skeleton of the
head to the inner ears, setting the otoliths in motion and stimulating the hair
cells.
·
The
fish’s air-filled swim bladder may contribute to the transfer of sound to the
inner ear.
°
Catfishes
and minnows have a series of bones, called the Weberian apparatus, which
conducts vibrations from the swim bladder to the inner ear.
·
Most
fishes and aquatic amphibians have a lateral
line system along both sides of their body.
°
The
system contains mechanoreceptors that detect low-frequency waves by a mechanism
similar to the function of a mammalian inner ear.
°
Water
enters the lateral line system through numerous pores and flows along a tube
past the mechanoreceptors.
§
The
receptor units, called neuromasts, resemble the ampullae in our semicircular
canals.
§
Each
neuromast has a cluster of hair cells whose hairs are embedded in a gelatinous
cupula.
§
Water
movement bends the cupula, depolarizing the hair cells and leading to action
potentials that are transmitted along the axons of sensory neurons to the
brain.
°
This
provides a fish with information concerning its movement through water or the
direction and velocity of water flowing over its body.
°
In
terrestrial vertebrates, the inner ear has evolved as the main organ of hearing
and equilibrium.
§
Some
amphibians have a lateral line as tadpoles, but not as terrestrial adults.
§
In
frogs and toads, sound vibrations are conducted to the inner ear by a tympanic
membrane on the body surface and a single middle ear bone.
§
A
small side pocket on the saccule functions as the main hearing organ of the
frog.
à
This
outgrowth of the saccule gave rise to the more elaborate cochlea during
mammalian evolution.
§
Birds
also have a cochlea.
à
As
in amphibians, sound is conducted from the tympanic membrane by a single bone,
the stapes.
Concept 49.3 The senses of taste and smell are
closely related in most animals
·
Many
animals use their chemical senses to find mates, to recognize territory that
has been marked by some chemical substance, and to help navigate during
migration.
·
Chemical
conversation is especially important for animals, such as ants and bees, which
live in large social groups.
·
The
perceptions of gustation (taste) and
olfaction (smell) are both dependent
on chemoreceptors that detect specific chemicals in the environment.
°
In
all animals, chemical senses are important in feeding behavior.
·
In
terrestrial animals, taste is the detection of chemicals in solution and smell
is the detection of chemicals in the air.
°
There
is no distinction between taste and smell in aquatic animals.
·
Taste
receptors in insects are located on their feet and in mouthparts, within
sensory hairs called sensilla.
°
A
tasting hair contains chemoreceptors responsive to particular classes of
chemical stimuli.
·
Insects
also have olfactory hairs on their antennae.
Human receptor cells for taste are organized
into taste buds.
·
In
mammals, taste receptors are located in taste
buds, most of which are on the surface of the tongue.
°
Most
taste buds are associated with nipple-shaped projections called papillae.
·
Each
taste receptor responds to a wide array of chemicals, but is most responsive to
a particular type of substance.
°
It
is the pattern of taste receptor response that determines perceived flavor.
·
Transduction
in taste receptors occurs by several mechanisms.
°
Chemoreceptors
that detect saltiness (mainly Na+) and sourness (H+
generated by acids) have channels in their plasma membrane though which these
ions can diffuse.
§
The
influx of Na+ or H+ depolarizes the cell.
°
In
chemoreceptors that detect bitter substances, the substance binds to K+
channels and closes them.
§
The
resulting decrease in potassium permeability depolarizes the cell.
°
The
mechanism for umami (glutamate) receptors may involve the binding of glutamate
to Na+ channels.
§
When
the glutamate is bound, the channels open, Na+ diffuses into the
cell, and it depolarizes.
°
Sweetness
is detected by chemoreceptors that have receptor proteins for sugars.
§
Binding
of a sugar molecule to a receptor protein triggers a signal transduction
pathway that results in depolarization.
·
In
all taste receptors, depolarization causes the smell to release
neurotransmitters onto a sensory neuron, which transmits action potentials to
the brain.
Olfactory receptor cells line the upper
portion of the nasal cavity.
·
In
mammals, olfactory receptors line the upper portion of the nasal cavity.
·
The
receptive ends of the cells contain cilia that extend into the layer of mucus
coating the nasal cavity.
°
The
binding of odor molecules to olfactory receptors initiates signal-transduction
pathways involving a G-protein-signaling pathway and, often, adenylyl cyclase
and second messenger cyclic AMP.
°
The
second messenger opens channels in the plasma membrane that are permeable to
both sodium and calcium ions.
°
The
influx of these ions depolarizes the membrane, causing the receptor cell to
generate action potentials.
·
Humans
can distinguish thousands of different odors, each caused by a structurally
distinct odorant.
°
There
are more than 1,000 odorant receptor genes, accounting for approximately 3% of
all genes in the human genome.
·
Each
olfactory receptor cell expresses only one or a few odorant receptor genes.
·
Cells
with different odorant selectivities are interspersed in the nasal cavity, but
their axons sort themselves out in the olfactory bulb of the brain.
·
Taste
and smell interact with each other, although the receptors and brain pathways
for the two senses are independent.
Concept 49.4 Similar mechanisms underlie vision throughout the
animal kingdom
·
Many
types of light detectors have evolved in the animal kingdom, from simple
clusters of cells that detect only direction and intensity of light to complex
image-forming eyes.
·
All
photoreceptors contain similar pigment molecules that absorb light.
°
Most,
if not all, animal photoreceptors may be homologous.
§
All
animals with vision share genes associated with the embryonic development of
photoreceptors.
§
The
genetic underpinnings of all photoreceptors may have evolved in the earliest
bilateral animals.
·
The
specific types of eyes that form in an animal depend on developmental patterns
regulated by genetic mechanisms that evolved later, superimposed on the common
ancestral mechanism.
A diversity of photoreceptors has evolved
among invertebrates.
·
The
eye cups of planarians are among the
simplest photoreceptors.
°
These
structures detect light intensity and direction, but do not provide image
formation.
°
The
movement of a planarian is integrated with photoreception.
·
Two
major types of image-forming eyes have evolved in invertebrates.
·
One
type of eye is the compound eye of
insects and crustaceans.
°
Each
eye consists of ommatidia, each with
its own light-focusing lens.
§
Each
ommatidium detects light from a tiny portion of the visual field.
°
This
type of eye is very good at detecting movement.
°
Insects
have excellent color vision, and some can see ultraviolet light.
·
Single-lens eyes are found in some
invertebrates such as jellies, polychaetes, spiders, and molluscs.
°
The
eye of an octopus works much like a camera and is similar to the vertebrate
eye.
§
Light
enters through the pupil, with the iris changing the diameter.
§
Behind
the pupil, a single lens focuses light on a layer of photoreceptors.
§
Muscles
in an invertebrate’s single-lens eye move the lens to focus at different
distances.
Vertebrates have single-lens eyes.
·
Vertebrate
eyes are structurally analogous to the invertebrate single-lens eye.
·
The
globe of the vertebrate eye (the eyeball) consists of a tough, white outer
layer of connective tissue called the sclera
and a thin, pigmented inner layer called the choroid.
·
A
delicate layer of epithelial cells forms a mucus membrane, the conjunctiva, which covers the external
cover of the sclera and keeps the eye moist.
°
At
the front of the eye is a transparent cornea,
which lets light into the eye and acts as a fixed lens.
·
The
conjunctiva does not cover the cornea.
·
The
anterior choroid prevents light rays from scattering and distorting the image.
°
Anteriorly,
it forms the iris, which gives the
eye its color.
§
The
iris regulates the size of the pupil.
·
Inside
the choroid, the retina lines the
interior surface of the choroid.
°
The
retina contains photoreceptors, except at the optic disk (where the optic nerve
attaches).
·
The
lens (a transparent protein disk)
and ciliary body divide the eye into
two cavities.
°
The
anterior cavity is filled with aqueous
humor produced by the ciliary body.
°
Glaucoma
results when the ducts that drain aqueous humor are blocked.
°
The
posterior cavity is filled with vitreous
humor.
·
The
lens, the aqueous humor, and the vitreous humor all play a role in focusing
light onto the retina.
°
In
squids, octopuses, and many fishes, this is accomplished by moving the lens
forward and backward.
·
In
mammals, focus is accomplished by changing the shape of the lens.
°
The
lens is flattened for focusing on distant objects.
°
The
lens is rounded for focusing on near objects.
°
When
focusing on a close object, the lens becomes almost spherical, a change called accommodation.
·
The
retina contains about 125 million rod
cells, which are light sensitive but do not distinguish colors, and about 6
million cone cells, which are not as
light sensitive as rods but provide color vision.
°
These
cells account for 70% of the sensory receptors in the body.
°
Rods
are most highly concentrated at the peripheral regions of the retina and are
completely absent from the fovea,
the center of the visual field.
°
Cones
are most dense at the fovea, which has 150,000 cones per square millimeter.
The light-absorbing pigment rhodopsin triggers
a signal-transduction pathway.
·
Each
rod or cone in the vertebrate retina contains visual pigments consisting of
light-absorbing molecules called retinal
bonded to membrane proteins called opsin.
·
Rhodopsin (retinal +
opsin) is
the visual pigment of rods.
°
The
absorption of light by rhodopsin initiates a signal-transduction pathway.
·
Color
reception is more complex than the rhodopsin mechanism.
°
There
are three subclasses of cone cells, each with its own type of photopsin.
§
Color
perception is based on the brain’s analysis of the relative responses of each
type of cone.
°
In
humans, colorblindness is due to a deficiency, or absence, of one or more
photopsins.
§
It
is inherited as an X-linked trait and is more common in males than females.
The retina assists the cerebral cortex in
processing visual information.
·
Visual
processing begins with rods and cones synapsing with neurons called bipolar cells.
·
In
the dark, rods and cones are depolarized, and they continually release the
neurotransmitter glutamate at these synapses.
°
This
steady glutamate release depolarizes some bipolar cells and hyperpolarizes
others.
·
In
the light, rods and cones hyperpolarize, shutting off the release of glutamate.
°
In
response, the bipolar cells that are depolarized by glutamate hyperpolarize,
and those that are hyperpolarized by glutamate depolarize.
·
Three
other types of neurons contribute to information processing in the retina:
ganglion cells, horizontal cells, and amacrine cells.
°
Bipolar
cells synapse with ganglion cells
and transmit action potentials to the brain via axons in the optic nerve.
°
Horizontal cells and amacrine cells help integrate the information before it is sent to
the brain.
·
Signals
from the rods or cones may follow a vertical or a lateral path in the retina.
°
In
the vertical pathway, information passes from photoreceptors to bipolar cells
to ganglion cells.
°
In
the lateral pathway, horizontal cells carry signals from one rod or cone to
other photoreceptors and to several bipolar cells, and amacrine cells
distribute information from one bipolar cell to several ganglion cells.
§
This
form of integration results in lateral
inhibition.
à
More
distant photoreceptors and bipolar cells are inhibited, which sharpens edges
and enhances contrast in the image.
·
All
the rods or cones that feed information to one ganglion cell form the receptive field for that cell.
°
A
larger receptive field results in a less sharp image than a smaller receptive
field, because the larger field provides less information about exactly where
the light struck the retina.
·
The
optic nerves of the two eyes meet at the optic
chiasm near the center of the base of the cerebral cortex.
°
At
the optic chiasm, sensations from the left visual field of both eyes are
transmitted to the right side of the brain.
°
Sensations
from the right visual field of both eyes are transmitted to the left side of
the brain.
°
Ganglion
cell axons lead to the lateral
geniculate nuclei of the thalamus.
°
Neurons
then convey information to the primary
visual cortex in the occipital lobe of the cerebrum.
°
Additional
interneurons carry the information to higher-order visual processing and
integrating centers elsewhere in the cortex.
·
Point-by-point
information in the visual field is projected along neurons onto the visual
cortex.
·
How
does the cortex convert a complex set of action potentials representing
two-dimensional images focused on our retina into 3-D perceptions of our
surroundings?
°
Thirty
percent of the cerebral cortex—hundreds of millions of interneurons in dozens
of integrating centers—take part in formulating what we actually “see.”
Concept 49.5 Animal skeletons function in support, protection, and
movement
·
Locomotion is active movement from
one place to another.
·
Swimming,
crawling, running, hopping, and flying all result from muscles working against
some type of skeleton.
·
A
hydrostatic skeleton consists of
fluid held under pressure in a closed body compartment.
°
Form
and movement is controlled by changing the shape of this compartment.
°
Among
the cnidarians, a hydra can elongate by closing its mouth and using contractile
cells in the body wall to constrict the central gastrovascular cavity.
§
Because
water cannot be compressed very much, decreasing the diameter of the cavity
forces it to increase in length.
°
The
interstitial fluid functions as the main hydrostatic skeleton in flatworms.
°
Nematodes
hold fluid in their pseudocoelom.
§
The
fluid is under high pressure, and contractions of the longitudinal muscles
result in thrashing movements.
°
The
coelomic fluid of earthworms acts as a hydrostatic skeleton.
§
The
coelomic cavity is divided into segments by septa, allowing the animal to
change the shape of each segment individually, using both circular and
longitudinal muscles.
à
Earthworms
use their hydrostatic skeletons to move by peristalsis.
§
Hydrostatic
skeletons are advantageous in aquatic environments and can support crawling and
burrowing.
à
However,
they do not allow the body to be held off the ground for running or walking.
·
An
exoskeleton is a hard encasement
deposited on the surface of an animal.
°
Many
molluscs are enclosed in a calcareous exoskeleton secreted by the mantle.
°
The
jointed exoskeleton of arthropods is composed of a cuticle.
§
Regions
of the cuticle vary in hardness and degree of flexibility.
§
About
30–50% of the cuticle consists of chitin.
§
Muscles
attach to the interior surface of the cuticle.
§
This
type of exoskeleton must be molted to allow for growth.
·
Endoskeletons consist of hard
supporting elements within the soft tissues of the animal.
°
Sponges
are reinforced by hard spicules of inorganic material.
°
Echinoderms
have an endoskeleton of hard plates composed of magnesium carbonate and calcium
carbonate, bound together by protein fibers.
°
Chordate
endoskeletons are composed of cartilage, bone, or some combination of the two.
§
Some
of the bones of the mammalian skeleton are connected at joints by ligaments,
while others are fused together.
Physical support on land depends on
adaptations of body proportions and posture.
·
A
large animal has very different body proportions than a small animal.
·
Larger
animals need proportionately stronger bones to support their large mass.
·
In
the support of body weight, posture may be more important than body
proportions.
°
Muscles
and tendons (connective tissue that join muscles to bone) hold the legs of large
animals relatively straight and positioned under the body and bear most of the
load.
Concept 49.6 Muscles move skeletal parts by contracting
·
Muscles
come in antagonistic pairs.
°
Humans
flex the arm by contracting the biceps, and extend it by contracting the
triceps and relaxing the biceps.
·
Vertebrate
skeletal muscle is responsible for
voluntary muscle movement in the body.
·
A
skeletal muscle consists of a bundle of long fibers running parallel to the
length of the muscle.
°
Each
fiber is a single cell with multiple nuclei.
·
A
fiber is a bundle of smaller myofibrils
arranged longitudinally.
·
The
myofibrils are composed of two kinds of myofilaments:
thin and thick filaments.
°
Thin filaments consist of two strands of
actin and one strand of regulatory protein coiled about each other.
°
Thick filaments consist of myosin
molecules.
Interactions between myosin and actin generate
force during muscle contractions.
·
The
sarcomere is the functional unit of
muscle contraction.
·
The
borders of the sarcomere, the Z lines,
are lined up in adjacent myofibrils and form the striations.
°
Thin
filaments are attached to the Z lines and project toward the center of the
sarcomere, while the thick filaments are centered in the sarcomere.
°
In
a muscle fiber at rest, thick and thin filaments do not overlap completely, and
the area near the edge of the sarcomere where there are only thin filaments is
called the I band.
°
The
A band is the broad region that
corresponds to the length of the thick filaments.
°
The
thin filaments do not extend completely across the sarcomere, so the H zone in
the center of the A band contains only thick filaments.
·
According
to the sliding-filament model of
muscle contraction, neither the thin nor the thick filaments change in length
when the sarcomere shortens.
°
Instead,
the filaments slide past each other longitudinally, producing more overlap
between the thick and thin filaments.
§
As
a result, both the region occupied only by thin filaments (the I band) and the
region occupied only by thick filaments (the H band) shrink.
·
The
sliding is based on the interaction between the actin and myosin molecules that
make up the thick and thin filaments.
°
Each
myosin molecule has a long tail region and a globular head region.
°
The
tail adheres to the tails of other myosin molecules.
°
The
head binds and hydrolyzes ATP and is the center of the bioenergetic reactions
that power muscle contraction.
·
Hydrolysis
of ATP triggers steps in which myosin binds to actin, forming a cross-bridge
and pulling the thin filament toward the center of the sarcomere.
°
The
cross-bridge is broken when a new molecule of ATP binds to the myosin head.
°
The
free head cleaves the new ATP and attaches to a new binding site on another
actin molecule farther along the thin filament.
·
A
typical muscle fiber at rest contains only enough ATP for a few contractions.
·
The
energy required for continued contractions is stored in creatine phosphate and
glycogen.
°
Creatine
phosphate can transfer a phosphate group to ADP to make ATP.
§
The
resting supply of creatine phosphate is sufficient to sustain contractions for
about 15 seconds.
°
Glycogen
is broken down to glucose, which can generate ATP via glycolysis or aerobic
respiration.
§
Using
glucose from a typical muscle fiber’s glycogen store, glycolysis can support
about 1 minute of sustained contractions, while aerobic respiration can power
contractions for nearly an hour.
Calcium ions and regulatory proteins control
muscle contraction.
·
At
rest, tropomyosin blocks the myosin
binding sites on actin.
·
When
calcium binds to the troponin complex,
a conformational change results in the movement of the tropomyosin-troponin
complex and exposure of actin’s myosin binding sites.
·
When
Ca2+ is present in the cytosol, the thick and thin filaments slide
by each other, and the muscle fiber contracts.
°
An
action potential in a motor neuron that makes a synapse with a muscle fiber is
the initial stimulus for muscle contraction.
°
The
synaptic terminal of the motor neuron releases the neurotransmitter
acetylcholine, depolarizing the muscle fiber and causing it to produce an
action potential.
°
The
action potential spreads deep into the muscle fiber along infoldings of the
plasma membrane called transverse (T)
tubules.
°
The
T tubules meet the muscle cell’s sarcoplasmic
reticulum (SR), and stored Ca2+ is released into the cytosol.
§
Ca2+
bind to the troponin complex, triggering contractions of the muscle fiber.
§
Contraction
stops when the SR pumps Ca2+ out of the cytosol, and tropomyosin
again blocks the myosin-binding sites on the thin filaments.
°
In
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), motor neurons in the spinal cord and
brainstem degenerate, and the muscle fibers with which they synapse atrophy.
§
ALS
is progressive and usually fatal; there is no cure.
°
Botulism
results from consumption of an exotoxin from the bacterium Clostridium botulinum in improperly preserved foods.
§
The
toxin paralyzes muscles by blocking the release of acetylcholine from motor
neurons.
Diverse body movements require variation in
muscle activity.
·
An
individual muscle cell either contracts completely or not all.
°
A
muscle fiber contracts with a brief contraction called a twitch.
·
A
whole muscle, composed of many
individual muscle fibers, can contract to varying degrees.
°
Contraction
is graded; we can voluntarily alter the extent and strength of a contraction.
°
This
is due to variation in the number of muscle fibers that contract and variation
in the rate at which muscle fibers are stimulated.
°
Each
motor neuron may synapse with many motor fibers.
§
Hundreds
of motor neurons control a muscle, each with its own pool of muscle fibers
scattered throughout the muscle.
§
A
motor unit consists of a single
motor unit and all the muscle fibers it controls.
°
When
a motor neuron produces an action potential, all the muscle fibers in its motor
unit contract as a group.
°
The
strength of the contraction depends on how many muscle fibers the motor neuron
controls, from a few to hundreds.
§
The
nervous system can thus regulate the strength of contraction in a whole muscle
by determining how many motor units are activated at a given instant and by
selecting large or small motor units to activate.
°
As
more and more of the motor neurons controlling the muscle are activated, a
process of recruitment increases the
force developed by the muscle.
°
Prolonged
contraction of muscles can result in fatigue, caused by depletion of ATP,
dissipation of ion gradients, and accumulation of lactate.
§
The
nervous system may alternate activation among the motor units in a muscle,
allowing different motor units to take turns maintaining a prolonged
contraction.
°
The
second mechanism by which the nervous system produces graded whole-muscle
contractions is by varying the rate of muscle fiber stimulation.
§
Summation
of action potentials will increase muscle fiber tension.
°
If
the rate of stimulation is fast enough that the muscle does not relax between
stimuli, the twitches fuse into a smooth sustained contraction called tetanus.
§
During
tetanus, elastic structures (tendons and connective tissue) are fully stretched
and all the tension generated by the muscle fiber is transmitted to the bones.
·
Muscle
fibers are specialized.
°
Fast muscle fibers are adapted for rapid,
powerful contraction, but fatigue relatively quickly.
°
Slow muscle fibers are adapted for sustained
contraction.
°
Relative
to fast fibers, slow fibers have less sarcoplasmic reticulum, so Ca2+
remains in the cytosol longer.
°
Fibers
that rely on glycolysis are called glycolytic fibers.
°
Oxidative
fibers rely mostly on aerobic respiration.
§
They
have more mitochondria, a better blood supply, and a large amount of an oxygen-storing
protein called myoglobin.
°
There
are three main types of skeletal muscle fibers: slow oxidative, fast oxidative,
and fast glycolytic.
°
In
addition to skeletal muscle, vertebrates have cardiac and smooth muscle.
°
Cardiac muscle is similar to skeletal
muscle, with striations.
§
Cardiac
muscle cells can generate their own action potentials.
§
Intercalated discs facilitate the
coordinated contraction of cardiac muscle cells.
§
Action
potentials of cardiac muscles can last up to twenty times longer than those of
skeletal muscle fibers.
·
Smooth muscle lacks the striations seen
in both skeletal and cardiac muscle.
°
Smooth
muscle lacks troponin complexes and T tubules and has poorly developed SR.
§
Small
amounts of Ca2+ enter the cytosol via the plasma membrane.
°
Smooth
muscles have slow contractions but have more control over contraction strength
than skeletal muscles.
°
These
involuntary muscles are found lining the walls of hollow organs.
·
Invertebrate
muscle cells are similar to vertebrate skeletal and smooth muscle cells.
°
The
flight muscles of insects are capable of independent, rhythmic contraction, so
the wings of some insects can actually beat faster than the action potentials
can arrive from the central nervous system.
Concept 49.7 Locomotion requires energy to overcome
friction and gravity
·
Most
animals are mobile and spend a considerable portion of their time actively
searching for food.
°
Different
modes of locomotion vary in energy
costs.
·
In
all its modes, locomotion requires that an animal expend energy to overcome two
forces that tend to keep it stationary: friction and gravity.
·
Since
water is buoyant, gravity poses less of a problem for swimming than for other
modes of locomotion.
°
However,
since water is dense, friction is more of a problem.
§
Fast
swimmers have fusiform bodies.
·
Animals
swim in diverse ways.
°
For
instance, many insects and four-legged vertebrates use their legs as oars to
push against the water.
°
Squids
and scallops are jet-propelled, taking in and squirting out water.
°
Sharks
and bony fishes move their bodies and tails from side to side, while whales
undulate their bodies and tails up and down.
·
For
locomotion on land, powerful muscles and skeletal support are more important
than a streamlined shape.
°
When
hopping, the tendons in a kangaroo’s legs store and release energy like a
spring that is compressed and released.
§
The
tail helps in the maintenance of balance.
°
When
walking, having three feet (or one foot, for bipeds) on the ground helps in the
maintenance of balance.
§
When
running, momentum—more than foot contact—helps keep the body upright.
°
Crawling
requires a considerable expenditure of energy to overcome friction, but
maintaining balance is not a problem.
§
Earthworms
crawl by peristalsis.
§
Many
snakes undulate the entire body from side to side, assisted in movement by
large, moveable scales on the underside of the body.
°
Gravity
poses a major problem when flying, because wings must develop enough lift to
overcome gravity’s downward force. The key to flight is the aerodynamic shape
of wings as airfoils.
§
Flying
animals are light, with body masses ranging from less than a gram for some
insects to 20 kg for the largest flying birds.
§
Birds
have hollow, air-filled bones and no teeth.
·
The
energetic cost of locomotion depends on the mode of locomotion and the environment.
°
Running
animals generally expend more energy per meter than equivalent-sized animals
specialized for swimming, partly because running or walking requires energy to
overcome gravity.
°
Swimming
is the most energy efficient mode of locomotion, assuming that the animal is
specialized for swimming.
°
Flying
animals use more energy than swimming or running animals with the same body
mass.
·
Larger
animals travel more efficiently than smaller animals specialized for the same
mode of transportation.
·
An
animal’s use of energy to move determines how much energy in food is available
for other activities, such as growth and reproduction.
°
Thus,
structural and behavioral adaptations that maximize the efficiency of
locomotion increase an animal’s evolutionary fitness.